the.com/peer review
scientists checking each other's homework before letting it near the public.
means the process where experts anonymously scrutinize a study before a journal publishes it, catching errors and fraud in theory, sometimes in practice.
from formalized in the 20th century as scientific journals grew, though the idea traces back to 18th-century societies like the royal society vetting papers before print; the phrase itself became standard academic vocabulary by the 1970s.
acceptance ratestop journals reject over 90 percent of submissions
anonymity variessingle-blind, double-blind, and open review all coexist
speed problemreviews can take months, sometimes years, unpaid
famous failuressome fraudulent studies passed review for years