Researchers: Have you ever received a peer review for your work that you thought was of insufficient quality/rigour?
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Replying to @Protohedgehog
Follow up, researchers: Have you ever submitted a peer review report that you didn't think was of sufficient quality? (This is anonymous)
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Replying to @Protohedgehog
The difference between poll numbers for both of these is astounding, and very noteworthy of a completely defunct peer review system.
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Replying to @Protohedgehog
I agree that
#peerreview is broken, but your questions are worded in a leading tone - particularly the first one2 replies 1 retweet 3 likes -
Replying to @MicrobialMe
Oh, how could I have phrased them better? It's got a lot of interesting feedback so far!
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Replying to @Protohedgehog
The 1st question leads people to agree with you. More objective if you asked people to rate experience as good, average or poor
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Replying to @MicrobialMe
How does it do that? What you suggest is quite a different question. I wanted to keep it simple and black and white.
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Replying to @MicrobialMe
Don't get me wrong, I appreciate it! I just don't see how 'Have you experienced xxx, yes or no' can be leading :)
2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
People are biased towards yes to questions regardless of question. That's a known phenomenon in psychology.
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