Journal eLife ends ‘accept or reject’ role for peer reviewers

Biomedical and life sciences publisher says it wants to focus reviewers’ attention on content of research

October 20, 2022

Open access publisher eLife has announced it will no longer make accept or reject decisions following peer review.

From the end of January, eLife will instead publish every paper it reviews as a “reviewed preprint”, which it describes as “a new type of research output that combines the manuscript with eLife’s detailed peer reviews and a concise assessment of the significance of the findings and quality of the evidence”.

The move by the biomedical and life sciences publisher, which was founded in 2012 by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Max Planck Society and the Wellcome Trust as a not-for-profit enterprise, follows its shift last year to only reviewing papers already published as a preprint.

Michael Eisen, eLife’s editor-in-chief, said the latest move was designed to focus reviewers’ attention on the content of research rather than a yes-no decision.

“By relinquishing the traditional journal role of gatekeeper and focusing instead on producing public peer reviews and assessments, eLife is restoring control of publishing to authors, recovering the immense value that is lost when peer reviews are reduced to binary publishing decisions, and promoting the evaluation of scientists based on what, rather than where, they publish,” said Professor Eisen.

Since its shift to reviewing preprints 18 months ago, eLife has published reviews of more than 2,200 preprints – a move that has contributed significantly to research, added deputy editor Anna Akhmanova.

“These public preprint reviews and assessments are far more effective than the decision to publish a manuscript ever could be at conveying the thinking of our reviewers and editors, and capturing the nuanced, multidimensional and often ambiguous nature of peer review,” she said.

In the new process, eLife editors will invite expert reviewers to carry out peer reviews. The reviewers will produce constructive public peer reviews highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of the work, eLife explained. They will also work together to produce an eLife “assessment” that captures their view of the significance of the findings and evaluates the strength of the evidence for them in language accessible to a non-expert reader, it added.

Authors will have the option to submit a revised preprint that responds to the public reviews and private suggestions made by the reviewers. eLife will then publish a new reviewed preprint with updated reviews and assessment, with its publication fee falling from $3,000 (£2,662) to $2,000, it said.

Fiona Hutton, eLife’s head of publishing, said that although “the core process of peer review is largely unchanged, the output is fundamentally different. With our sole focus now on producing and conveying useful public reviews and assessments, we are restoring autonomy to authors and defining a change in role for publishers.”

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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