Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
The recent problems with the publication of the O’Donnell et al. response to the Steig et al. paper on Antarctica have focused attention on continuing problems with the current system of peer review, problems initially highlighted by the CRU emails. In addition to significant questions revealed in this particular case, I’d like to look at other general issues with peer review.
For me, the most inexplicable and interesting part of the Steig/O’Donnell affray has nothing to do with the scientific questions. It also has nothing to do with the actions of Steig or O’Donnell, actions which have much exercised discussion of scientific and personal ethics on the blogosphere. It also has nothing to do with Antarctica, or with statistics.
The inexplicable part to me was that Dr. Steig was named as a reviewer of the O’Donnell paper by the Journal Editor, Dr. Anthony Broccoli.
It was inexplicable because in the ancient tradition of adversarial science, the O’Donnell paper claimed that there were serious issues with the Steig methods. That being the case, the very last person to be given any say as to whether the paper should be published is Steig. If it were my Journal, I would have immediately called Dr. Broccoli, the Editor, on the carpet to explain such an egregious breach of both the journal policy and more importantly, common sense. Appointing Steig as a reviewer is contrary to the stated policies of the journal, which say:
A reviewer should be sensitive even to the appearance of a conflict of interest when the manuscript under review is closely related to the reviewer’s work in progress or published. If in doubt, the reviewer should indicate the potential conflict promptly to the editor.
Having Steig as a reviewer was done even though the authors of the O’Donnell paper wrote directly to the Editor (Broccoli) wrote to ask that Steig “be treated as a conflicted reviewer or that his review, at least, be sent to unconflicted reviewers for consideration before requiring us to make more major revisions.” The exact wording of the request was:
We have several concerns that we feel do not belong in the response and are more appropriately expressed in a letter. With this in mind, we would like to take a few moments of your time to discuss them. First, it is quite clear that Reviewer A is one (or more) of the authors of S09. This results in a conflict of interest for the reviewer when examining a paper that is critical of their own. This conflict of interest is apparent in the numerous misstatements of fact in the review. The most important of these were: …
This request was ignored by the Editor.
Steven Mosher had an interesting comment on this issue:
What makes this case different from any other “conflicted” reviewer case I’ve seen is this: Steig had made a public challenge to meet the author on the battlefield of peer reviewed literature. And in the case of Ryan [O’Donnell] this is an author who has no track record. That kind of challenge has no analogue that I’ve ever seen. Let’s see if I can make one
Imagine, for example, that you are a grad student with zero publications.
Imagine you make a pointed criticism or two of Judith Curry at a public forum, say an AGU Keynote. Imagine that Judy responds to you by saying, “go ahead try to get that published kid”
If you were that kid would you feel it was appropriate to have Judith review the paper? Would you have any reason to wonder if she was doing more than defending the science if as reviewer she gave you a hard time? Heck, even taking the reviewer assignment would be a sign to you that she intended to defend two things: her published paper and her public challenge/reputation.
Even beyond the special issues in this particular case highlighted by Steven Mosher, using a reviewer with such a glaring conflict of interest is also contrary to more general policies on conflicts of interest, such as the policy of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors:
Editors should avoid selecting external peer reviewers with obvious potential conflicts of interest–for example, those who work in the same department or institution as any of the authors.
While this seems clear to me, and likely to you, Dr. Broccoli seems not to have gotten the memo.
Please be clear that I am not saying that Steig should not be offered every opportunity to respond to the issues raised by O’Donnell et al. He should indeed be offered that. The normal way that this is done would be for the Journal Editor to give space (usually in the issue where the new paper is published) for Steig to respond to the issues.
But giving Steig a say of any kind in whether the paper should be published? Where is the common sense in that? Does anyone seriously believe that in that position, some scientists would not try to prevent the publication of the new paper? Human nature roolz last time I looked …
I have seen Dr. Broccoli’s actions defended in the blogosphere, usually by saying that the Editor will use their expert judgement to determine if a reviewer is engaged in gatekeeping behavior. They also say that the most knowledgeable person about a paper is likely the author, so the Editor needs their specialized knowledge.
The problem that I have with that idea is, if the Editor is so knowledgeable about the statistical issues in question that he can distinguish Steig’s gatekeeping from true claims, then why does he need Steig as a reviewer?
And if the Editor is not knowledgeable in the statistical questions involved (Dr. Broccoli is a climate modeller, not a statistician … nor is Steig a statistician for that matter), then he won’t have the knowledge to see whether Steig is gatekeeping or not.
Also, if the Editor is that good and knowledgeable, then why do scientific journals (including Dr. Broccoli’s journal) have policies strongly discouraging reviewers with conflicts of interest?
And even if the Editor is that knowledgeable (which Dr. Broccoli seems not to be), remember that the goal is to avoid even the “appearance of a conflict of interest” … just how did Dr. Broccoli decide that having Steig as a goalkeeper does not present the “appearance of a conflict of interest”? My grandma could see that conflict of interest from her current residence … and she’s been dead for fifty years.
This farrago shows once again, just as was shown in the CRU emails revealed by Climategate, that peer review for AGW scientists is far too often “pal review” – just a gatekeeping fiction to keep any kind of opposing views from seeing the light of day, and to give puffball reviews to AGW supporting papers. Yes, as a number of people have said, at the end of the day the system kinda sorta worked, with a crippled paper (e.g. no Chladni patterns) emerging from the process. But I can say from my own experience that sometimes it ends up with a paper going in the trash can, purely because of gatekeeping from AGW pal review.
And in any case, is that all that scientists are asking for? A system that kinda sorta works some of the time? Because that’s certainly not what the public either wants or expects.
My suggestions to make peer review a better system are:
• Double blind reviews, where neither the reviewers nor the author are aware of each others’ identities. At present this is true in some journals but not others.
• All reviews get published with the paper, with each one signed by the responsible reviewer.
This has a number of advantages over the current system:
1. Reviewers comments become part of the record. This is very important, as for example a minority review which is outvoted to get the paper published may contain interesting objections and other ideas. Or a favorable review can immediately be seen to be based on false logic.
2. Gatekeeping and conflicts of interest of the kind favored by Dr. Broccoli will be immediately apparent.
3. While it is sometimes possible for authors or reviewers to guess each others’ identities, at least it will only be a guess.
4. As the experience of the internet shows, anonymity does not encourage honesty or collegialty … it is easy to say anything you want if you know that you will never have to take responsibility for your words.
5. People could start to get a sense about the editorial judgement of the editors of the journals. If an editor frequently uses conflicted reviewers, for example, people should be aware of that.
6. There will be a permanent record of the process, so even years later we can see how bad paper slipped through or what logical mistakes led to unnecessary changes in the paper. This can only lead to improvements in the science.
People have said that if we publish reviews and reviewers’ names, people will be less willing to be reviewers, so the quality of reviews will suffer. I don’t think that’s true, for two reasons.
First, if someone wants to be an anonymous reviewer but is unwilling to sign their name to their opinion … why on earth would we pay any more attention to their opinion than that of a random anonymous blogger?
Second, if reviewing a paper offers a chance for a scientist to get his name and his ideas enshrined on the record in a scientific journal … why do people assume that scientists would not jump at the chance? I know I would … and it is true whether I might agree or disagree with the paper.
That’s what I see as broken about the system, and how I would fix it … with sunshine, the universal disinfectant. Yes, it is important during the review for the reviewers and the authors to be anonymous and the proceedings secret. But once the procedure is complete, there is nothing to lose and everything to gain by keeping the peer review process open. Keeping it secret just encourages the current abusive system of pal review.
[Addendum] A couple of posters noted that I had not addressed rejected papers, my thanks for the feedback.
Each journal should publish papers that have been rejected, in electronic form only, and allow free public access to them.
In a way, this is more important than publishing the accepted papers. Science proceeds by falsification. But we have hidden away the most important falsification in the entire process, the falsification done by the reviewers.
These provisionally falsified claims are very important. If the reviewers’ rejections hold up, it will provide the ideas and logic needed to assess future repetitions of the same claim. If an eminent statistician has convincingly refuted my argument, THAT SHOULD BE IN THE PUBLIC RECORD.
Then the next time the argument comes up, someone could just say nope, someone tried that, here’s why it doesn’t work.
It would also encourage people to be reviewers, since their eminently scientific work of falsification would not be hidden away forever … and where’s the fun in that?
Now that I think about it, the current Journal practice of hiding scientific falsifications of proposed ideas is greatly hindering the progress of science. We’re throwing good scientific data and logic and argument in the trash can, folks. And by not showing the world that some idea has been judged and found wanting (and why), the same ideas keep coming up over and over again. As George Santayana didn’t say, “Those who cannot remember the falsification are condemned to repeat it”.
Regards to everyone,
w.
[Addendum 2] Gotta love the instant feedback of the web. Andrew Guenthner says in the comments below:
I would agree with Leif that requiring journals to publish rejected papers is a bad idea, for many reasons. For one thing, getting science published is not difficult. Sure, getting it published in a top-tier journal can be tough, but there are plenty of places where the level of competition is low. In reality, most rejected papers with good science do not end up in the “trash can”; they end up in more specialized publications where there is less competition. And in most places, it is easy (and getting easier) to self-publish. The real issues in most cases involve prestige and attention, not actual publication, and putting rejected papers online won’t make people pay attention to them, especially if (as would be likely) most scientific indexing services ignore them. Even now, a lot of technical papers get self-published online and appear in Google searches, and the purpose of many search tools is changing from simply finding out about work to filtering out the bad or irrelevant work. Making journals publish rejected papers just shifts part of the burdens and costs from the authors to the journals. Besides all this, journals generally require authors to give them the copyrights to work that they publish, and many journals will not publish material if it has appeared in some form already. As a scientific author, you are much better off retaining control of the distribution of your rejected paper, trying to improve its quality before it gets in front of a large audience, and looking for a more suitable venue than simply forcing someone to put it “out there” for you.
Good points all, Andrew, I can’t gainsay any of that. I stand corrected. I’d still like to find a system whereby when a high-powered statistician shows that my idea is 100% wrong, it is in the public record so we don’t have to do it again and again. I’m taking ideas on this one …

Did it again Willis – Nailed it!
Too bad the JoC (joke?) doesn’t get it.
[snip . . off topic]
I have to say I’m with Theo Goodwin on this. I’d cut the good Dr. more slack if it weren’t for the fact that his jounal’s own standards insist “…A reviewer should be sensitive even to the appearance of a conflict of interest…” Dr. Broccoli was rather more like the boy who delights in placing ants from different colonies in the same container and observing the ensuing mayhem.
For the benefit of the public record, how many hours of work did O’Donnell spend on replies, modifications, and rebuttals to Steig’s written objections? How many of those hours contributed to making a better paper?
In the age of the internet, all review documents with the editor in the distribution list should be published on line. They need to be part of the historical record. Of course, once on line, the identities of the reviewers must be published, too.
A fast index of papers, abstracts, 100-word review summaries, maybe even a grade A through F attached to the Paper AND cross linked to the reviewer would quickly be benefical.
Wouldn’t have been interesting to see who might have recommended rejection of Einsteins three short papers in 1905? I heard one story several years ago that later in his life, Einstein refereed a paper that went into higher dimensionality than his. models; he delayed by years asking for more work and changes. Einstein, through delay, ruined the best productive years of that little known mathematician by keeping him and his ideas unknown to most in the field. Lengthy delays to publication just are not right for it robs people of time, a resource most difficult to recover.
Great thread Willis.
I believe technology is already driving a change in publishing and peer review. Some online journals are already publishing reviewers comments with their names as well as the authors responses to these reviews. I do not agree with comments that people are less likely to review papers if their names are published — if someone cannot stand by his or her comments they should not be a reviewer.
I can see it all going abit further in the near future in that because of the ease of online searches it does not matter to the author in which journal the paper gets published . So the prestige will not be from the Journals name or brand but it will from the calibre of reviewer it can attract to comment on the paper.
I also agree with Leif’s comment that publication of rejected papers does not serve any useful purpose to anyone.
>> Mike says:
February 17, 2011 at 6:15 pm
When the National Academy of Sciences says they have come to a consensus that human caused climate change is real and very dangerous you should take it very seriously. <<
Could you please post a link to when a vote of the membership was taken, and the results of that vote?
I disagree that reviewers should be named, for the simple reason that then it will be much more difficult to get reviewers. Of course the editor should not have used Steig as a reviewer, and the journal should acknowledge this and review & fix the process.
“in the ancient tradition of adversarial science”
No, there is no such tradition. You are misapprehending the spirit of inquiry and projecting blog science or “auditing” or what have you onto science, which has always been based on trust and collegiality. That’s why the penalty for fraud is professionally fatal.
I too have a problem with the following proposal:
Each journal should publish papers that have been rejected, in electronic form only, and allow free public access to them.
In order for this to succeed, there would have to be a mechanism for a reasonable period of time to pass before a rejected paper would be “published” online. An otherwise excellent paper might be a poor fit with one journal, yet be an excellent fit for another. To kill off such a paper by “publishing” it too early could be a real loss of an important result.
Facetious thought: maybe all papers should include a list of the journals that rejected them. Of course this might create a game of seeing just how many quality journals could be coerced into rejecting a given paper before it is accepted.
There is always someone wanting to game the system.
CCR
Willis Eschenbach says:
February 17, 2011 at 4:47 pm
Each journal should publish papers that have been rejected, in electronic form only, and allow free public access to them.
and Leif replies to it that most of the papers are rejected etc. I agree with him.
In addition most people whose paper is rejected by one publication will apply to another one, so there is no meaning in having a reject blog on each publication, for obvious reasons: each publication keeps a copyright if it decides to publish.
I think slowly the internet with the archive sites is evolving towards having a record of all works sent to publication, so this problem will be solved eventually.
The suggestion of publishing the reviews in parallel is good.
Willis, you said:
“Each journal should publish papers that have been rejected, in electronic form only, and allow free public access to them.
In a way, this is more important than publishing the accepted papers. Science proceeds by falsification. But we have hidden away the most important falsification in the entire process, the falsification done by the reviewers.”
—-
Absolutely brilliant, sir! The Internet is proving to be an incredibly valuable form of peer-review, as we see on this blog. If this process can be worked into a consistent process, science will benefit tremendously.
DocMartyn says:
Anonymity protects reviewers form powerful authors.
I had not thought of this. I can also now see a pecking order created if reviewers are unmasked. Maybe just the reviews should be published, with the identity known only to the editors. Maybe it would be enough that malicious reviewing would be public and the public would respond with letters to the editor castigating biased or wrong reviews.
Too bad scientists no longer need a reputation.
Ehrlic and Holdren, the science Czar, included.
Apparently a pHd can still say anything, hide the data, and fudge the findings.
Wow
Great posting… and great comments…
The term Peer Review seems to be intrinsically linked to the concepts of Learned Journals of Record, Group Think, Self Interest and CYA – Cover Your Arse… while you suggestions would significantly improve the situation they would not eradicate the problem… it is the age old problem of who polices the police force… just take a look at Wikipedia to see what happens to the truth when the thought police are given control.
However, there is room to be optimistic in the internet age… the review and comment process is alive and well on the internet – WUWT is a classic example… the open forum is alive and well on the internet – the Electric Universe web sites are a classic example… and the other positive development is that the Learned Journals that hide behind paywalls are no longer Journals of Record be definition because they are inaccessible and are withering on the vine.
So the internet is the embodiment of the phase Publish and be damned provided that we have an open internet, ethical search engines and ethical web sites… and it is in these areas that we need to be especially vigilant… the concept of an open internet is increasingly becoming an illusion… there are very few ethical web sites that are open for all comments and many websites have a habit of rewriting history… the concept of an ethical search engine is already commercially and politically compromised… so be vigilant and at times… always look for multiples sources of information… and always check the stated facts.
PS
I am pleased to say WUWT is on my personal ethical web site list… its not perfect… but very good… Thank you Mr Watts.
The best science is an art, in the sense that any great, breakthrough achievements are not properly understood by the contemporary button sorters and bottle washers professionally occupied in the same field.
This is the reason why Grigoriy Perelman rejected two most prestigious (and lucrative) awards in mathematics. “These people are not qualified to give me awards,” — he said to the Russian reporter who managed to make Grigoriy talk a little, because he joined him in the forest for mushroom hunting.
Consider: while there was no “peer review” in music, we had Beethoven or Chopin every 15 years or so. As classical music was quickly becoming a government-sponsored, institutionalized national sport in the beginning of the 20th century, real talent moved to unregulated and non-sponsored fields of jazz and pop music. Now these genres are also being institutionalized — and, therefore, killed off.
Same happened to all arts in the 20th century. Same happens now to the science.
A true genius has no peers. Posterity is his judge.
Given the closeness of the Pal review system and the team, I have doubts as to whether the double blind system would be truly blind.
One question that arises out of this affair is how the original Steig paper got through the review process? Why didn’t someone spot the obvious flaws in that paper? The failure to spot these flaws shows that the review system does not ensure quality or robustness.
Does anyone know who reviewed the original Steig paper. Was this an example of review by the Team and pal review? Can anyone find out who the reviewers were?
The hurricane expert Bill Gray springs to mind. Back when Gore was Vice President and Hansen was relishing his first experiences of power, Gray again and again asked for funding to research thermohaline circulation, suggesting it might explain the warming side of natural cycles. Again and again funding was denied, and he was told, “Stick with hurricanes, Bill.” Instead of gaining data on real reality, the funding went for Hansen’s virtual reality.
When a military contractor holds a contract review with military personnel present and the contractor provides lunch, the contractor must put out a”basket” to collect contributions from the military personnel. The military personnel must “pay” for the lunch in order to avoid the “apperance of conflict”. Failure to comply with this requirement might lead to legal action against the contractor, the military officer, or both! As a former military officer, I find the arguments that Dr. Steig had no conflict of interest in being an anonymous reviewer of the O’Donnell paper simply foolish. That the editor of the journal is defended by others indicates how far the scientific community has drifted from the pursuit of truth. The editor essentially allowed Dr. Steig to make a rebuttal IN PRIVATE, leaving open the possibility that we, the public, would never see either argument. This is the antithesis of science.
??? moderators??? Was there something offensive in my previous post? I note that others on the thread have voiced similar concerns. Was it the use of the term “Human primates”? I understand that this is an American site, and that some may find this controversial. I would not be overly concerned if this were the reason for moderation, however a [snip] with a state reason would be helpful 🙂
[Reply: Your comment was in the spam folder. It’s been rescued and posted. ~dbs, mod.]
Beyond excellent, Willis, this is central to the Steig/O’Donnell controversy. AMI editors have a DUTY to avoid conflict of interests as stated in AMI policy. (John Nielsan Gallimon failed to address this issue in the discussion,17/02/11, on Climate Audit.) Tear down the walls !
Peer Review, Pal Review, and Broccoli Posted on February 17, 2011 by Willis Eschenbach
This was a most excellent analysis and summary including the posters, thank you Willis. And how slow the responses were. Perhaps so many scientists have moved on to other areas and no longer contribute- they are either dead or silenced, vowed to never return to their work and the broader ethic as they understood of being a scientist.
While I think the cartoon prescient, I am however reminded of Solzhenitzen, The Gulag Archipelago in the Preface
‘”…but by an unexpected turn of history, a bit of the truth, an insignificant part of the whole, was allowed out in the open. But those same hands which once screwed tight our handcuffs now hold out their hands in reconciliation.”
“No, don’t! Don’t dig up the past. Dwell on the past and you’ll lose an eye.”
But the proverb goes on to say ‘Forget the past and you’ll lose both eyes.’
Peer review accounts for a biased sample: of those having consensus; that lied/manipulated the truth [MattN says: February 17, 2011 at 5:10 pm]; or hopped on the band wagon at latter stages, to contribute their well (or not) -founded knowledge. This is not science. It is peer review and marketing at its pinnacle.
Science and Freedom has no place there.
Dr. Broccoli is a climate modeller…
‘Nuff said.
Konrad said :
Even publishing review comments without the authors name would remove anonymity in scientific circles.
Do the positives of preventing conflict of interest and gate keeping out weigh the risk of social pressure on the named reviewers?
I expressed a similar worry above, if the reviewers names are published. But if only the format “reviewer A,B,C” is kept the recognition of the identity by the cognoscenti is not bad: it will keep the heads of the field from being too arrogant and it will shield the less well known ones from vindictiveness. If the field is too narrow in any case the reviewers will be guessed. Publication will keep them on the straight and narrow, certainly in scientific content..
I forgot – another damn fine post, Willis!
I’m really fed up by the way both sides of this debate have thrown around the term “peer review” as if it were in any way meaningful. So I’ll recount a brief personal anecdote.
A few decades ago I was the lead author of an interesting if not exactly earth-shaking paper on the molecular pathology of mammalian tumours. That study involved the administration of substance LMN to tumour-bearing rats and rabbits. LMN had originally been prepared by an obscure enzymology genius – ABC – working in the top secret UK Porton Down military laboratories, by a tedious and difficult biosynthetic process involving fractionation and purification of rabbit urine. His method was published in ABC1960 (or thereabouts).
LMN is an interesting molecule with potential anti-tumour properties and – praise the Lord – ABC subsequently published an enormously improved and totally synthetic catalytic preparation in ABC1970 (or thereabouts).
We prepared LMN by the ABC1970 method with excellent high purity yields and got very interesting results from our poor bunnies and rats. So we submitted what we thought was a pretty good paper to one of the foremost experimental pathology journals of the day, in 1978.
It was rejected out of hand. The (sole) peer reviewer opined that our preparation of LMN (done by the method of ABC1970) was rubbish since “it is well known the only way to produce LMN is by the method of ABC1960”. There was apparently no way of appealing this judgement by our anonymous, lazy, ignorant and possibly senile “peer”. Let’s call him “FKWT”
Anyway, in disgust I absconded from academia to private practice and have published nothing since. A decision, I might add, I have never regretted.
So, please don’t use “Peer Review” as a “gotcha”. It’s definitely not.
Cheers.