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ARTICLE |

The Effects of Blinding on Acceptance of Research Papers by Peer Review FREE

Martin Fisher, MD; Stanford B. Friedman, MD; Barbara Strauss
[+] Author Affiliations

Presented in part at the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication, Chicago, III, September 11, 1993.

Reprint requests to Division of Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, North Shore University Hospital—Cornell University Medical College, 300 Community Dr, Manhasset, NY 11030 (Dr Fisher).


JAMA. 1994;272(2):143-146. doi:10.1001/jama.1994.03520020069019
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Objective.  —To study whether reviewers aware of author identity are biased in favor of authors with more previous publications.

Design.  —Randomized controlled trial.

Setting.  —Editoria office of the Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics.

Participants.  —Two "blinded" and two "nonblinded" reviewers assigned to 57 consecutive manuscripts submitted between September 1991 and March 1992.

Outcome Measures.  —Spearman rank correlation coefficients were used to compare the sum of rating scores of 1 to 5 (1, accept; 5, reject) given by the two blinded reviewers, the two nonblinded reviewers, and the editors to the number of articles published previously by the first and senior authors (as determined from requested curricula vitae). Blinded reviewers were sent a questionnaire asking whether they could determine the identity of the authors, how they knew, and whether they thought blinding changed the quality or difficulty of their review.

Results.  —The Wilcoxon Sign Rank Test disclosed no differences between blinded and nonblinded scores. The number of previous articles by the senior author was significantly correlated (P<.01) with blinded scores (r=—.45) and editors' decisions (r=—.45), but not with nonblinded scores; the number of articles by the first author was correlated (P<.05) with editors' decisions (r=—.35) but not with blinded or nonblinded scores. Fifty (46%) of 108 blinded reviewers correctly guessed the identity of the authors, mostly from self-references and knowledge of the work; 86% believed blinding did not change the quality of their review, and 73% believed it did not change the difficulty of performing a review.

Conclusions.  —Blinded reviewers and editors in this study, but not nonblinded reviewers, gave better scores to authors with more previous articles. These results suggest that blinded reviewers may provide more unbiased reviews and that nonblinded reviewers may be affected by various types of bias.(JAMA. 1994;272:143-146)

REFERENCES

Cleary JD, Alexander B.  Blind vs non-blind reviews: survey of selected medical journals. Drug Intell Clin Pharmacol . 1988;;22:601-602.
Morgan PD.  Anonymity in medical journals. Can Med Assoc J . 1984;;131:1007-1008.
Squires BP.  Editor's page: blinding the reviewers. Can Med Assoc J . 1990;;142:279.
Rennie D, ed.  Editorial peer review in biomedical publication: the first international conference. JAMA . 1990;;263:1317-1341.
McNutt RA, Evans AT, Fletcher RH, Fletcher SW.  The effects of blinding on the quality of peer review: a randomized trial. JAMA . 1990;;263:1371-1376.
Zar JH. Biostatistical Analysis . 2nd ed. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall Inc; 1984;:176-179.
Peters D, Ceci S.  Peer review practices of psychological journals: the fate of published articles submitted again. Behav Brain Sci . 1982;;165:187-195.
Ceci S, Peters D.  How blind is blind review? Am Psychol . 1984;;39:1491-1494.
Rosenblatt A, Kirk SA.  Recognition of authors in blind review of manuscripts. J Soc Serv Res . 1980;;3:383-394.
Blank RM.  The effects of double-blind versus single-blind reviewing: experimental evidence from the American Economic Review. Am Econ Rev . 1991;;81:1041-1067.
Evans AT, McNutt RA, Fletcher SW, Fletcher RH. Characteristics of peer reviewers who produce good reviews. Read before the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication; September 9, 1993; Chicago, Ill.
McNutt RA, Evans AT, Fletcher SW, Fletcher RH. The effects of blinding on editors' decision making. Read before the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication; September 11, 1993; Chicago, Ill.
Harnad S.  Peer commentary on peer review (special symposium issue). Behav Brain Sci . 1982;; 5:185-256.
Yankauer A.  Peer review again. Am J Public Health . 1982;;72:239-240.
Strasburger VC.  Righting medical writing. JAMA . 1985;;254:1789-1790.
Bailar JC III, Patterson K.  Journal peer review: the need for a research agenda. N Engl J Med . 1985;;312:654-657
Shapiro S.  The decision to publish: ethical dilemmas. J Chronic Dis . 1985;;38:365-372.
Robin ED, Burke CM.  Peer review in medical journals. Chest . 1987;;91:252-255.
Feinstein AR.  Some ethical issues among editors, reviewers and readers. J Chronic Dis . 1986;; 39:491-493.
Lock S. A Difficult Balance: Editorial Peer Review in Medicine . Philadelphia, Pa: ISI Press; 1985;.
Kupfersmid J.  Improving what is published: a model in search of an editor. Am Psychol . 1988;;43: 635-642.
Mahoney MJ, Kazdin AE, Kenigsberg M.  Getting published: the effects of self-citation and institutional affiliation. Cogn Ther Res . 1978;;2:69-70.
Lloyd ME.  Gender factors in reviewer recommendations for manuscript publication. J Appl Behav Anal . 1990;;23:539-543.
Garfunkel JM, Hamrick HJ, Lawson EE, Vishen MH. Effect of institutional prestige on reviewers' recommendations and editorial decisions. Read before the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication; September 11, 1993; Chicago, Ill.
Gilbert J, Williams E, Lundberg GD. Is there gender bias in JAMA's peer review process? Read before the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication; September 11, 1993; Chicago, Ill.

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Cleary JD, Alexander B.  Blind vs non-blind reviews: survey of selected medical journals. Drug Intell Clin Pharmacol . 1988;;22:601-602.
Morgan PD.  Anonymity in medical journals. Can Med Assoc J . 1984;;131:1007-1008.
Squires BP.  Editor's page: blinding the reviewers. Can Med Assoc J . 1990;;142:279.
Rennie D, ed.  Editorial peer review in biomedical publication: the first international conference. JAMA . 1990;;263:1317-1341.
McNutt RA, Evans AT, Fletcher RH, Fletcher SW.  The effects of blinding on the quality of peer review: a randomized trial. JAMA . 1990;;263:1371-1376.
Zar JH. Biostatistical Analysis . 2nd ed. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall Inc; 1984;:176-179.
Peters D, Ceci S.  Peer review practices of psychological journals: the fate of published articles submitted again. Behav Brain Sci . 1982;;165:187-195.
Ceci S, Peters D.  How blind is blind review? Am Psychol . 1984;;39:1491-1494.
Rosenblatt A, Kirk SA.  Recognition of authors in blind review of manuscripts. J Soc Serv Res . 1980;;3:383-394.
Blank RM.  The effects of double-blind versus single-blind reviewing: experimental evidence from the American Economic Review. Am Econ Rev . 1991;;81:1041-1067.
Evans AT, McNutt RA, Fletcher SW, Fletcher RH. Characteristics of peer reviewers who produce good reviews. Read before the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication; September 9, 1993; Chicago, Ill.
McNutt RA, Evans AT, Fletcher SW, Fletcher RH. The effects of blinding on editors' decision making. Read before the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication; September 11, 1993; Chicago, Ill.
Harnad S.  Peer commentary on peer review (special symposium issue). Behav Brain Sci . 1982;; 5:185-256.
Yankauer A.  Peer review again. Am J Public Health . 1982;;72:239-240.
Strasburger VC.  Righting medical writing. JAMA . 1985;;254:1789-1790.
Bailar JC III, Patterson K.  Journal peer review: the need for a research agenda. N Engl J Med . 1985;;312:654-657
Shapiro S.  The decision to publish: ethical dilemmas. J Chronic Dis . 1985;;38:365-372.
Robin ED, Burke CM.  Peer review in medical journals. Chest . 1987;;91:252-255.
Feinstein AR.  Some ethical issues among editors, reviewers and readers. J Chronic Dis . 1986;; 39:491-493.
Lock S. A Difficult Balance: Editorial Peer Review in Medicine . Philadelphia, Pa: ISI Press; 1985;.
Kupfersmid J.  Improving what is published: a model in search of an editor. Am Psychol . 1988;;43: 635-642.
Mahoney MJ, Kazdin AE, Kenigsberg M.  Getting published: the effects of self-citation and institutional affiliation. Cogn Ther Res . 1978;;2:69-70.
Lloyd ME.  Gender factors in reviewer recommendations for manuscript publication. J Appl Behav Anal . 1990;;23:539-543.
Garfunkel JM, Hamrick HJ, Lawson EE, Vishen MH. Effect of institutional prestige on reviewers' recommendations and editorial decisions. Read before the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication; September 11, 1993; Chicago, Ill.
Gilbert J, Williams E, Lundberg GD. Is there gender bias in JAMA's peer review process? Read before the Second International Congress on Peer Review in Biomedical Publication; September 11, 1993; Chicago, Ill.
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