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Publishing peer review materials.

Jeffrey BeckKathryn FunkMelissa HarrisonJo McEntyreJosie BreenAndy CollingsPaul DonohoeMichael EvansLouisa FlintoftAudrey HamelersPhil HurstThomas LembergerJennifer LinNiamh O'ConnorMichael ParkinSam ParkerPeter RodgersMagdalena SkipperMichael Stoner
Published in: F1000Research (2018)
Publishing peer review materials alongside research articles promises to make the peer review process more transparent as well as making it easier to recognise these contributions and give credit to peer reviewers. Traditionally, the peer review reports, editors letters and author responses are only shared between the small number of people in those roles prior to publication, but there is a growing interest in making some or all of these materials available. A small number of journals have been publishing peer review materials for some time, others have begun this practice more recently, and significantly more are now considering how they might begin. This article outlines the outcomes from a recent workshop among journals with experience in publishing peer review materials, in which the specific operation of these workflows, and the challenges, were discussed. Here, we provide a draft as to how to represent these materials in the JATS and Crossref data models to facilitate the coordination and discoverability of peer review materials, and seek feedback on these initial recommendations.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • randomized controlled trial
  • systematic review
  • machine learning
  • big data
  • electronic health record
  • clinical practice
  • artificial intelligence
  • meta analyses