Post-publication critique at top-ranked journals across scientific disciplines: a cross-sectional assessment of policies and practice

Author:

Hardwicke Tom E.1ORCID,Thibault Robert T.23ORCID,Kosie Jessica E.4ORCID,Tzavella Loukia5ORCID,Bendixen Theiss6ORCID,Handcock Sarah A.7,Köneke Vivian E.8,Ioannidis John P. A.2910ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 129-B, 1018 WT Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford (METRICS), Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

3. School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

4. Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA

5. School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK

6. Department of the Study of Religion, Aarhus University, Aarhus, UK

7. Florey Department of Neuroscience and Mental Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

8. Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany

9. Departments of Medicine, Epidemiology and Population Health, Biomedical Data Science, and Statistics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

10. Meta-Research Innovation Center Berlin (METRIC-B), QUEST Center for Transforming Biomedical Research, Berlin Institute of Health, Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Journals exert considerable control over letters, commentaries and online comments that criticize prior research (post-publication critique). We assessed policies (Study One) and practice (Study Two) related to post-publication critique at 15 top-ranked journals in each of 22 scientific disciplines ( N = 330 journals). Two-hundred and seven (63%) journals accepted post-publication critique and often imposed limits on length (median 1000, interquartile range (IQR) 500–1200 words) and time-to-submit (median 12, IQR 4–26 weeks). The most restrictive limits were 175 words and two weeks; some policies imposed no limits. Of 2066 randomly sampled research articles published in 2018 by journals accepting post-publication critique, 39 (1.9%, 95% confidence interval [1.4, 2.6]) were linked to at least one post-publication critique (there were 58 post-publication critiques in total). Of the 58 post-publication critiques, 44 received an author reply, of which 41 asserted that original conclusions were unchanged. Clinical Medicine had the most active culture of post-publication critique: all journals accepted post-publication critique and published the most post-publication critique overall, but also imposed the strictest limits on length (median 400, IQR 400–550 words) and time-to-submit (median 4, IQR 4–6 weeks). Our findings suggest that top-ranked academic journals often pose serious barriers to the cultivation, documentation and dissemination of post-publication critique.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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