Title :
Ethics of scientific peer review: Are we judging or helping the review recipients?
Author :
Adewoyin, Oluwabunmi ; Vassileva, Julita
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada
Abstract :
Traditionally, ethics of a profession or organization are laid down by their pioneers, or subtly emerge over time as the organization advance. Getting conversant to these ethics requires teaching new or upcoming professionals, in order to avoid any form of misconduct, either deliberately or unknowingly. Peer review has been used as a quality control measure in the scientific community to ensure that only novel, high-quality and significant research work can be published. Typically, experienced and well respected scientists are selected to review the work of their peers or other upcoming scientists. Ideally, people who ethically qualify as reviewers, should have high reputation in terms of their ability to give objective and well-informed judgement, write constructive and helpful critique in a timely manner and, are honest and open in revealing any conflict of interest that may exist. The key objectives of peer review are two fold: 1) summative - to assess the quality of scholarly work, and 2) formative - to provide constructive feedback and thus, to mentor authors to become both better researchers, and better writers.
Keywords :
ethical aspects; human factors; physics education; teaching; argumentation skills; computer science students; conference management software tools; conflict-of-interest; constructive feedback system; editorial staff; ethics; formative form; mentoring; public reputation system; quality control measure; research reviewing; review recipients; scholarly work quality; scientific community; scientific peer review system; software engineering students; summative form; teaching assistant; undergraduate class; writing assignments; writing skills; Communities; Computer science; Editorials; Education; Ethics; Postal services; Writing; ethics and IT; ethics education; group formation; peer review;
Conference_Titel :
Ethics in Science, Technology and Engineering, 2014 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/ETHICS.2014.6893385