WOW.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Academic publishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_publishing

    Peer review is a central concept for most academic publishing; other scholars in a field must find a work sufficiently high in quality for it to merit publication. A secondary benefit of the process is an indirect guard against plagiarism since reviewers are usually familiar with the sources consulted by the author(s).

  3. Scientific consensus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_consensus

    Consensus is achieved through scholarly communication at conferences, the publication process, replication of reproducible results by others, scholarly debate, and peer review. A conference meant to create a consensus is termed as a consensus conference.

  4. Wikipedia:Scientific peer review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Scientific_peer...

    It aims to offer a high-calibre, content-oriented critique of articles on scientific subjects. Peer review is one of the most important tools on Wikipedia. Over the past few months we have been under the spotlight over our accuracy, receiving reviews from newspapers and academic journals. Nature deemed us, on scientific articles, as error-laden ...

  5. Harvard Business Review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_Business_Review

    Harvard Business Review began in 1922 [6] as a magazine for Harvard Business School. Founded under the auspices of Dean Wallace Donham, HBR was meant to be more than just a typical school publication. "The paper [ HBR] is intended to be the highest type of business journal that we can make it, and for use by the student and the business man.

  6. Scholarly communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scholarly_communication

    Scholarly communication involves the creation, publication, dissemination and discovery of academic research, primarily in peer-reviewed journals and books. [1] It is “the system through which research and other scholarly writings are created, evaluated for quality, disseminated to the scholarly community, and preserved for future use." [2]

  7. Systematic review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systematic_review

    A systematic review is a scholarly synthesis of the evidence on a clearly presented topic using critical methods to identify, define and assess research on the topic. A systematic review extracts and interprets data from published studies on the topic (in the scientific literature), then analyzes, describes, critically appraises and summarizes interpretations into a refined evidence-based ...

  8. Preprint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preprint

    Typical publishing workflow for an academic journal article ( preprint, postprint, and published) with open access sharing rights per SHERPA/RoMEO. In academic publishing, a preprint is a version of a scholarly or scientific paper that precedes formal peer review and publication in a peer-reviewed scholarly or scientific journal.

  9. PsycINFO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PsycINFO

    More than 2,540 peer-reviewed journal titles are included in the database, and they make up 78% of the overall content. Journals are included if they are archival, scholarly, peer-reviewed, and regularly published with titles, abstracts, and keywords in English.