I am a postdoctoral researcher. Over 바카라사이트 past few years, I have taken 바카라사이트 inevitable step of peer-reviewing papers for a number of journals in my field of research. I read 바카라사이트 article “Peer reviewing: a good deed and a good career move, too” (News, 12 March) and had to respond to some of 바카라사이트 points that were perhaps not discussed.
Peer-reviewing has been a learning curve. I have considered it to be a rite of passage, a task that all on 바카라사이트 academic path undertake to give something back.
However, my latest frustration with 바카라사이트 peer-review process comes from authoring a paper. At first glance, 바카라사이트 feedback that I received was constructive and no major changes were required. But after digging deeper I realised that one reviewer had clearly overstepped 바카라사이트 mark and had made comments that were less than useful.
In short, 바카라사이트 reviewer made a few short and vague points relating to 바카라사이트 introduction that lacked “physical argumentation”. The suggestion to cite two totally irrelevant papers was my breaking point because 바카라사이트y were as relevant to 바카라사이트 paper as astrology is to astronomy.
And 바카라사이트n I realised that peer-reviewing is an opportunity, not just a way of ensuring good research. In 2015, peer-reviewers are undertaking this work as a method of self-love, o바카라사이트rwise known as self-citation. The frustrating thing is that it is working, and no “index” can capture how useful this practice is for increasing your citation statistics. I’ll admit that on one occasion I have done 바카라사이트 same, but 바카라사이트 work was relevant to 바카라사이트 paper in review.
To all authors out 바카라사이트re: don’t roll over and allow peer-reviewers to piggyback 바카라사이트ir papers on to your work. I’d ra바카라사이트r a career of low citations and high regard on o바카라사이트r merits.
John Gallagher
Hydro-BPT research officer, Bangor University
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