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A logo with the word ASAPbio appears over a background of clear lab test tubes. A red arrow points to the left before the word.

How to launch a transformative and sustainable forum for publication and scholarly critiques of research in the life sciences?

By Harinder Singh Director, Division of Immunobiology and the Center for Systems Immunology Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center This perspective is a result of the various insightful commentaries that have been posted on the ASAPbio site ... It is clear from the various commentaries that our shared intent is to strengthen and accelerate research in the life sciences through transformation of the publication landscape.
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A close-up of a fake disguise featuring a pair of round spectacles attached to a bushy, white beard and mustache. The background is dark, highlighting the whimsical appearance of the disguise.

Early Career Researchers and their involvement in peer review

By Gary McDowell, Future of Research When it comes to peer review and the role that Early Career Researchers (ECRs) play in it, I am of course reminded of the immortal words of Steve McKnight in his President’s Message at the American Society for B... Biomedical research is a huge enterprise now; it attracts riff-raff who never would have survived as scientists in the 1960s and 1970s.
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A logo with the word ASAPbio appears over a background of clear lab test tubes. A red arrow points to the left before the word.

In support of journal-agnostic review

By Vivian Siegel In my own experience, and I’ve written about this in the past, peer review in the context of journal submission suffers from a number of biases. These include journal-based biases that would be eliminated by a journal agnostic process.
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Flowchart illustrating prepublication quality control: Manuscript leads to preprint and quality control data curation. Followed by peer review, technical review, and copyediting, resulting in a final research paper. Human curation and automation are integrated.

Preprint QC

By Bernd Pulverer, EMBO As preprint posting takes hold in the biosciences community, we need both quality control and curation to ensure we share results in a reproducible and discoverable manner The EC has taken the bold step – at least on pa... The Open Science piece includes an ongoing project ‘The Open Science cloud’ as well as a dedicated online publishing/preprint platform – details pending at the time of writing.
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A logo with the word ASAPbio appears over a background of clear lab test tubes. A red arrow points to the left before the word.

Advancing peer review

By Elizabeth Moylan, Senior Editor, Peer Review & Innovation, BMC (part of Springer Nature) At BMC, we’ve always supported innovation in peer review and were one of the first publishers to truly open up peer review in 1999. Fiona Godlee, then Editorial Director for BMC, explained the reasons for this decision, including ethical superiority (reviewers are accountable for their decisions and there is less scope for biased or unjustified judgements or misappropriate of dat...
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A comic showing a researcher receiving papers with comments and feedback from a preprint service. They present the work to a journal club. Text bubbles: These are good comments! and This model lacks statistical validation. At the bottom: PREreview logo.

Preprint Journal Clubs: building a community of PREreviewers

By Samantha Hindle and Daniela Saderi, PREreview The image above (DOI)  is CC-BY 4.0 licensed and is available for download on Figshare. Preprints are freely available scientific manuscripts that have not yet undergone editorial peer review.
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