Reviews
Each research school participating in BREW will receive two papers per participant for review.
We will try to distribute the papers such that everyone can get one paper close to their
own field, and one quite remote from their field. We encourage you to discuss the papers with
other reviewers from your site.
All the reviews should be in plain text, and returned by the contact person for the research school
by March 20th.
Practically all papers submitted to scientific journals and conferences are peer reviewed, and
one of the goals of BREW is to give an introduction to the review process. All participants
will have their paper reviewed by two or three other participants, and each participant has to
review two or three papers. Unlike normal peer reviews,
the reviewer is not going to give any recommendation regarding whether the paper is to be
accepted or not (all papers are accepted), but the review report will be sent back to the
author of the paper. The reviews are anonymous.
You should put some work into understanding the papers you are reviewing, and try to
write a good review report. If you are not familiar with the research field, read some of the literature
cited in the paper to get a better idea of what the paper is about. This may require a little
effort on your behalf, and it can be a good thing to discuss the papers you are reviewing with
the other participants of BREW.
The review report should be about one page of plain text (and not more), and should have
no formatting. It is not acceptable to say that you don't know anything about the research field,
that is not useful for the author or the paper. Instead, point out what is missing in the
introduction if it is hard to figure out what the paper is about from the submitted text.
The review report should emphasise the comprehensibility and focus of the paper.
Comprehensibility is important throughout the paper, from the introduction to the discussion of
the results. Did you understand the major points of the paper? Can you point out specific parts that
are unclear, and possible ways to improve these? Are the results presented in a comprehensible and relevant
way, and are they compatible with the claims made in the discussion? Does the author discuss his or her
findings in relation to relevant methods? Are strengths and weaknesses of the method or field presented, and
do you agree with the conclusions? Why or why not? Do you think the author has focused on the correct
problem definitions and methods? Does the paper contain information that is not relevant, and can you
suggest possible improvements?
It is important to focus on both on what is good with the paper and what is not so good, and not only find
what is wrong with it.
A review should start with a 5-10 line summary of what the paper is about, so that the editors and the authors
can see that the reviewer has understood the paper.
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