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Open peer review: A variant of peer review in which the authors of a scholarly manuscript or grant proposal are informed about the identity of the reviewers. [e]
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Parent topics
- Scientific research [r]: The practice of using the scientific method to investigate causal relationships in detail. [e]
- Research peer review [r]: Evaluation by experts of the quality and pertinence of research or research proposals of other experts in the same field. [e]
- Transparency (behaviour) [r]: A fundamental philosophy of total openness between individuals and organizations. [e]
Subtopics
- Single-blind peer review [r]: The currently most common variant of peer review, in which the reviewers of a scholarly manuscript or grant proposal are informed about the identity of the authors, but not vice versa. [e]
- Journal peer review [r]: The most common variant of manuscript peer review, in which scholarly manuscripts are being evaluated; used by academic publishing agencies to decide about formal publication in academic journals. [e]
- Grant peer review [r]: A variant of peer review in which grant proposals are being evaluated; used by research funding agencies to decide how to distribute their funds. [e]
- Anonymous peer review [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Public peer review [r]: A variant of peer review in which the evaluation of a scholarly manuscript or grant proposal takes place in public before formal publication. [e]
- Post-publication peer review [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Scholarly publishing [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Academic journal [r]: A regularly-published, peer-reviewed publication that publishes scholarship relating to an academic discipline. [e]
- Research funding [r]: The provision of financial resources for the purpose of studying something by means of the scientific method. [e]
- Research proposal [r]: A description of planned scientific research that is formally submitted to a research funding agency. [e]
- Web 2.0 [r]: A description of the WWW that allows for greater social interaction between producers and consumers, authors and readers of content, to the point where such distinctions become meaningless. [e]
- Research 2.0 [r]: An umbrella term for the use of Web 2.0 tools and principles in scientific research; often used interchangeably with science 2.0 but technically includes research in fields other than science, such as the humanities. [e]