Instructions for Referees
Consider the following questions when writing your report:
- Assess significance
- Is the topic addressed important/interesting? (Does the review say why?)
- How original is the review? (compared with existing reviews of field?)
- Are the results reported significant?
- Verify accuracy
- Are all claims backed by evidence?
- Are the evidences relevant/reliable/sufficient?
- Are methods/results appropriate and well-described?
- Is important relevant work omitted?
- Does the review suffer from any bias?
- Improve clarity
- Is the review well organized?
- Do title/abstract accurately reflect content?
- Right level of detail?
- Language issues or typos?
The typical report consists of one page of plain text. To help the author and editor, all claims should be backed by evidence.
A note on the format of your peer-review: the best format to submit your review is just plain text pasted in the relevant fields. Alternatively, you can submit a PDF or DOC document, but be aware that your name might be included in the metadata of that document, thereby compromising your anonymity.