Drawing on personal experience, Adrian Furnham expresses concern over what he sees as peer-review 鈥渘ightmares鈥 and the 鈥渁rbitrariness of journal decision-making鈥 (鈥Take the rough with the smooth鈥, Opinion, 23聽May). In a career in which he has published more than 1,000 peer-reviewed papers, he can certainly claim to have tested the frailties of the system.
If we assume a 40-year period of research (give or take a few years), Furnham鈥檚 output would equate to about 25 papers a year, or a paper submitted to an editor every two weeks (not including rejections and resubmissions to other journals). If we also assume a minimum of one correction per paper, his communications with editors would average at least 50 a year, or about one a week. An easy task, Furnham might claim, but possibly not for all the editors and reviewers floundering in his wake.
If his approach is not a recipe for the occasional bout of chaos or worse, I don鈥檛 know what is. Indeed, Furnham seems to agree: in trying to understand one particular editor, he wonders whether he is suffering from 鈥渁 short-term memory problem, overwork鈥 or playing 鈥渁 prank鈥. Perhaps it is all three. What is certain is that if all researchers adopted 颅Furnham鈥檚 demanding approach to the peer-review system, it would quickly collapse.
Ben Atkinson
Hertfordshire
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