• DocumentCode
    1348622
  • Title

    Spectral lines: Judging the judges

  • Author

    Christiansen, Donald

  • Volume
    12
  • Issue
    11
  • fYear
    1975
  • Firstpage
    29
  • Lastpage
    29
  • Abstract
    Peer review, a subject of perennial interest to authors and editors, is once again in the headlines. This time the subject merited the interest of the U.S. Congress, which wondered if the National Science Foundation´s use of the peer review process in helping award grants is fair and efficient. The premise of the Congressional look-see was that perhaps Congress itself should assume more of a role in the review process. Underlying the probe was the feeling that the peer review process is not perfect, that reviewers can be biased, that they may be in conflict of interest, or that they may misuse their anonymity. While all of these suppositions may, on occasion, be true, no one has yet proposed a clearly superior system. Harold Davis, editor of Physics Today, in commenting on the Congressional probe, puts the onus on the agency program officers to deal with the hazards of conflict and bias that may occasionally arise ¿ a delegation of responsibility with which we must agree. (There is a clear parallel between refereeing papers and awarding grants ¿ in neither case does the final decision rest with the reviewers.)
  • Keywords
    Awards activities; Editorials; Hazards; NIST; Peer to peer computing; Physics; Probes;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Spectrum, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9235
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MSPEC.1975.6367481
  • Filename
    6367481