PubPeer
URLpubpeer.com
Launched2012

PubPeer is a website that allows users to discuss and review scientific research after publication, i.e. post-publication peer review, established in 2012.

The site has served as a whistleblowing platform, in that it highlighted shortcomings in several high-profile papers, in some cases leading to retractions and to accusations of scientific fraud,[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] as noted by Retraction Watch.[8] Contrary to most platforms, it allows anonymous post-publication commenting, a controversial feature which is the main factor for its success.[9][10] Consequently, accusations of libel have been levelled at some of PubPeer's users;[11][12] correspondingly the website has since 2016 told commentators to use only facts that can be publicly verified.[13]

Questions have been raised about the copyright ownership of PubPeer's often-anonymous contents.[14]

In 2021 a study found that "more than two-thirds of comments [on PubPeer] are posted to report some type of misconduct, mainly about image manipulation". Health sciences and life sciences were shown to have most comments, and most comments reporting publishing fraud and data manipulation. Social science and humanities disciplines in turn had fewer comments, but the highest percentage comments about critical reviews about theory and highlight methodological flaws. The research concluded that "while biochemists access the site to report misconduct... social scientists and humanists use it to discuss conclusions and detect methodological errors". The study also reported that 85.6% of comments are anonymous and that "only 31.5% of publications received more than three comments, and the response rate of authors is very low (7.5%)."[15]

In 2023 a study found that "only 21.5% of the articles [flagged on PubPeer] that deserve an editorial notice (i.e., honest errors, methodological flaws, publishing fraud, manipulation) were corrected by the [relevant] journal".[16]

In November 2024, PubPeer and its co-Founder, Brandon Stell, received the Institutional Award for research integrity from the Einstein Foundation (Germany).[17]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Researcher admits mistakes in stem cell study". Phys.org. 23 May 2013.
  2. ^ Sven Stockrahm; Lydia Klöckner; Dagny Lüdemann (2013-05-23). "Zellbiologe gibt Fehler in Klonstudie zu". Zeit.
  3. ^ Cyranoski, David; Check Hayden, Erika (2013-05-23). "Stem-cell cloner acknowledges errors in groundbreaking paper". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature.2013.13060. ISSN 1476-4687.
  4. ^ Otake, Tomoko (2014-04-20). "'STAPgate' shows Japan must get back to basics in science". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2024-08-31.
  5. ^ Singh Chawla, Dalmeet (2024-04-29). "How reliable is this research? Tool flags papers discussed on PubPeer". Nature. 629 (8011): 271–272. Bibcode:2024Natur.629..271S. doi:10.1038/d41586-024-01247-6. PMID 38684831.
  6. ^ Ordway, Denise-Marie (2023-08-01). "5 tips for using PubPeer to report on research and the scientific community". The Journalist's Resource. Retrieved 2024-08-31.
  7. ^ Barbour, Boris; Stell, Brandon M. (2020-01-28), Biagioli, Mario; Lippman, Alexandra (eds.), "PubPeer: Scientific Assessment Without Metrics", Gaming the Metrics, The MIT Press, pp. 149–156, doi:10.7551/mitpress/11087.003.0015, ISBN 978-0-262-35656-5, retrieved 2024-08-31{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  8. ^ "Leading diabetes researcher corrects paper as more than a dozen studies are questioned on PubPeer". Retraction Watch. 12 January 2015. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
  9. ^ Torny, Didier (February 2018). Pubpeer: vigilante science, journal club or alarm raiser? The controversies over anonymity in post-publication peer review. International Conference on Peer Review.
  10. ^ Teixeira da Silva, Jaime A. (2018-01-01). "The opacity of the PubPeer Foundation: what PubPeer's "About" page tells us". Online Information Review. 42 (2): 282–287. doi:10.1108/OIR-06-2017-0191. ISSN 1468-4527.
  11. ^ Paul Jump (13 November 2014). "Can post-publication peer review endure?". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  12. ^ "PubPeer's first legal threat" (blog). 24 August 2014. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  13. ^ "PubPeer - How to comment on PubPeer". pubpeer. Archived from the original on 15 November 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
  14. ^ Silva, Jaime A. Teixeira da (2018-07-01). "The Issue of Comment Ownership and Copyright at PubPeer". 教育資料與圖書館學. 55 (2): 227–237. doi:10.6120/JoEMLS.201807_55(2).e001.BC.BE.
  15. ^ Ortega, José Luis (May 2022). "Classification and analysis of PubPeer comments: How a web journal club is used". Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 73 (5): 655–670. doi:10.1002/asi.24568. ISSN 2330-1635.
  16. ^ Ortega, José-Luis; Delgado-Quirós, Lorena (2023-01-23). "How do journals deal with problematic articles. Editorial response of journals to articles commented in PubPeer". Profesional de la información. 32 (1) e320118. doi:10.3145/epi.2023.ene.18. hdl:10261/362437. ISSN 1699-2407.
  17. ^ "Einstein Foundation Awards". award.einsteinfoundation.de. Retrieved 2024-12-12.

Further reading

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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Thomas C. Südhof

Cure Alzheimer's Fund. Südhof’s work has been scrutinized extensively on PubPeer, where commenters have criticized more than 30 of Südhof papers. These

David A. Sinclair

Wrann, Christiane D.; Hubbard, Basil P.; Mercken, Evi M. (2013-12-19). "PUBPEER Dissection of Anomalies with Figures in Declining NAD(+) induces a pseudohypoxic

Conspiracy theory

through whistleblowers or through incompetence. Subsequent comments on the PubPeer website point out that these calculations must exclude successful conspiracies

Theo Baker

Baker learned about the accusations through the scientific review website PubPeer and brought them to scientific integrity expert Elisabeth Bik. A lawyer

Lonsdaleite

2022). "Discovery of a nanodiamond-rich layer in the Greenland ice sheet". PubPeer. Retrieved 28 September 2022. Kvasnytsya, Victor; Wirth; Dobrzhinetskaya;

Elisabeth Bik

the content. She is also an active contributor to Retraction Watch and PubPeer, highlighting scientific papers that present falsified, duplicated, and

Scientific misconduct

such as Web of Science, Scopus, Medline, data from Retraction Watch and PubPeer found that while the total number of research publications double every

Retraction Watch

database and Crossref would process, open, analyze, and present the data. PubPeer Replication crisis Research Integrity Risk Index Center for Open Science