What is
Peer Review?

Peer review is the foundation of scholarly publishing. It is the process by which reports about research findings are critically assessed by experts in the same field before they are published. Its aim? To ensure accuracy, originality, integrity—and ultimately, trust.

Peer Review Models

Peer review helps ensure reports about research findings are credible, rigorous, and worthy of publication. But not all peer review works the same way. Different models reflect varying approaches to transparency, anonymity, and timing—each with its own strengths, challenges, and growing experimentation across disciplines.

The Language of Peer Review—Standardized

Peer review is a cornerstone of scholarly publishing. This STM/NISO framework introduces a clear, shared vocabulary for describing the various aspects of how it works—supporting transparency and helping everyone from authors to readers understand the key terms used in the process.

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In this model, the reviewers know the identity of the author(s), but the author(s) do not know who reviewed their work. This structure is designed to encourage honest, constructive critique by shielding reviewers from potential influence or pressure.

Here, both the authors and the reviewers are anonymized to each other. This method seeks to minimize biases related to authors’ affiliations, gender, or geographic origin, promoting a more impartial evaluation of the manuscript’s content.

Open peer review encompasses various models where the identities of the authors and reviewers may be disclosed, and review reports may be published alongside the article. This approach fosters transparency, accountability, and open dialogue within the scholarly community.

In this model, the evaluation of the research report continues after publication, often through public comments, discussions, or formal critiques. Post-publication review allows for ongoing scrutiny and discourse, complementing traditional pre-publication peer review processes.

A Brief History of Peer Review

Peer review didn’t just emerge—it was built, debated, and refined over centuries of scholarly exchange.

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The Path of a Submitted Manuscript

Peer-reviewed publication involves more than a single decision. Reviewers evaluate, editors consider, authors may revise. See how research moves through this multi-step process.

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