Who’s minding the data?
The screening process at bioRxiv is minimal, Dr. Inglis said. An in-house staff checks each paper for obvious flaws, like plagiarism, irrelevance, unacceptable article type, and offensive language. Then they’re sent out to a committee of affiliate scientists, which confirms that the manuscript is a research paper and that it contains science, without judging the quality of that science. Papers aren’t edited before being posted online.
Each bioRxiv paper gets a DOI link, and appears with the following disclaimer detailing the risks inherent in reading “unrefereed” science: “Because [peer review] can be lengthy, authors use the bioRxiv service to make their manuscripts available as ‘preprints’ before peer review, allowing other scientists to see, discuss, and comment on the findings immediately. Readers should therefore be aware that articles on bioRxiv have not been finalized by authors, might contain errors, and report information that has not yet been accepted or endorsed in any way by the scientific or medical community.”
From biology to medicine
The bioRxiv team is poised to jump into a different pool now – medical science. Although the launch date isn’t firm yet, medRxiv will go live sometime very soon, Dr. Inglis said. It’s a proposed partnership between Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, the Yale-based YODA Project (Yale University Open Data Access Project), and BMJ. The medRxiv papers, like those posted to bioRxiv, will be screened but not peer reviewed or scrutinized for trial design, methodology, or interpretation of results.
The benefits of medRxiv will be more rapid communication of research results, increased opportunities for collaboration, the sharing of hard-to-publish outputs like quality innovations in health care, and greater transparency of clinical trials data, Dr. Inglis said. Despite this, he expects the same kind of push-back bioRxiv initially encountered, at least in the beginning.