Peer review is the name of a process by which the work and ideas of an individual or group is assessed by another individual or group considered to have a level of expertise near to that of the assessed. Thus the reviewers are deemed to be the "peers" of the assessed. The purposes of peer review are to inform decisions either on the allocation of funds among a number of applicants ("research grant agency peer review "), or on the publication of the results of research ("editorial peer review"). This web-page is concerned primarily with grant peer review, and advocates extensive reform. Sadly, the quest for excellence in research has not been accompanied by a quest for excellence in the evaluation of that excellence. To prevent further deterioration, it is proposed that conventional peer review be replaced by a new form of peer review, called "bicameral review". In the sense that our justice system declares it better the guilty go free than that the innocent be condemned, we believe it better that poor research be supported than that excellent research be condemned to zero support. Donald Forsdyke |
Despite lip-service to the contrary, the grant agencies assess projects, not people. In the final analysis they hold it is better that a less able researcher carry out an approved project, than that a more able researcher carry out an unapproved project. Indeed, they hope with the funding carrot to coerce the more able researchers to carry out approved projects. For the less able researchers this is not a problem. They just have to write an honest application stating what they want to do and why they want to do it. On the other hand, the more able researchers, who can see beyond the conventional wisdom, have serious difficulties. Grant writing is a marketing exercise that, more often than not, requires that that their "best" ideas be discarded, since, by definition, these ideas are difficult to understand and communicate (if not, the less able researchers would have already thought of them). Thus, the more able researchers are tested, not on their abilities to come up with innovative ideas, but on their abilities to tune in to the conventional wisdom, and write an application with an appropriate degree of marketing spin. Many able researchers, and especially the most able, find this, not only distasteful, but impossible to do. People find this difficult to understand. Why can't the researchers just write a simple application, and then, when they have the money, use it to do the work they want to do? Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on your perspective) the most able researchers, although they come in all shapes and sizes, have one common attribute - integrity. They can no more discard this than a tortoise can discard its shell, or a giraffe its neck! Thus, the major premise here is that peer review, as currently practiced in North America and many other places, is highly error-prone. It discriminates against the most able, so achieving the very opposite of what is desired. This means that over several decades peer-review has "dummed down" the Professoriat, decreased the quality of available "expert" advice, and impaired the process of scientific discovery. What is the remedy?
In the context of research funding this translates into:
There are four reasons why such obvious reforms have not been made:
2.Winners do not want change
3. Losers think they see losers
4.
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