COPE's guide on how to recognise potential manipulation of the peer review process. It contains details on recognised features or patterns of reviewer activity and best practice recommendations on how to minimise peer review manipulation.
Key points
Peer reviewers may be suggested by:
- the Editor handling the manuscript;
- authors on submission of their manuscript to a journal;
- another reviewer who is unable to peer review the manuscript.
While there is an expectation that everyone involved in the process acts with integrity, the peer review process can be susceptible to manipulation as discussed at COPE’s 2016 North American Seminar. The features or patterns of activity shown in the infographic are suggested to help Editors recognise potential signs of peer review manipulation. Often it is the occurrence of these features in combination that may indicate a potential issue, and they may only become apparent at later stages in the peer review or publishing process.
Related resources
About this resource
Cite this as
COPE Council. COPE Flowcharts and infographics - How to recognise potential manipulation of the peer review process - English.
https://doi.org/10.24318/cope.2019.2.15
©2021 Committee on Publication Ethics (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
https://publicationethics.org
Version history
Version 1: September 2017.
Full page history
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23 February 2024
Minor design edits and citation information added to flowchart; updated citation information on web page.
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12 February 2021
Changed title to match the revision of the All Flowchart PDF