Lifted from the Weasel King
Apr. 16th, 2013 02:26 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
If this error turns out to be an actual mistake Reinhart-Rogoff made, well, all I can hope is that future historians note that one of the core empirical points providing the intellectual foundation for the global move to austerity in the early 2010s was based on someone accidentally not updating a row formula in Excel."
no subject
Date: 2013-04-18 02:28 pm (UTC)-
The last set of peer-reviewer comments I received (still in press, not one of the things listed in my link) largely fell into three categories:
1) A request that we include a more thorough analysis of the video footage (there was no video footage, and nowhere in the paper were the words "video" or "camera" even mentioned).
2) A request that we add an "additional" statistical test that was already included in the paper.
3) A request that we add another statistical test: this one wasn't in the paper already, because it was mathematically nonsensical to even try to analyse the data that way.
Plus, of course, the usual demands that we add citations to half a dozen papers of limited relevance that were obviously written by the reviewers themselves (I've even had this made in reference to papers that were not yet published at the time of the review).
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Of course, not all reviewers are alike, and I'm sure that you're one of the good ones. But, IME, that makes you rather exceptional.
no subject
Date: 2013-04-18 04:31 pm (UTC)Citation requests like that are shameful. Sure, we rely on being cited, but that's no way to get the citations. I asked an author a while back to add a reference which was so relevant & important that it made me question the quality of their lit search, never mind their knowledge of the field; the practice you describe is so depressingly common that I bet they think I'm one of the authors, which I'm not. Did you add them, or did you argue they weren't really relevant?
no subject
Date: 2013-04-18 08:03 pm (UTC)I've only ever had one paper refused publication, and that was when I was trying to get something deliberately controversial (but true...) into a high-profile journal. In that case, the three reviewer responses consisted of one "wonderful, publish immediately!" and two "kill it with fire".
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Date: 2013-04-19 02:48 am (UTC)Even though this was the first paper I'd ever reviewed, I was not kind.
no subject
Date: 2013-04-19 09:45 am (UTC)Best I find to be dispassionate and detailed about papers like that; heaping abuse on it just riles the authors and causes stress for the editor.
I once made the mistake of recommending a paper be rejected for a similarly huge flaw (in my view) and not going into all the other problems with it. A revised version came back 6 months later with a work-round of sorts for the main problem, and a load of other issues still there because all the reviewers thought the main issue would be enough to get it rejected on its own.