On 2016 Mar 23, Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva commented:
From my personal experience a PubPeer from what I have observed is that there are all kinds of anonymous:
those with a desire to hold an academic discussion, as if in a journal club;
those with valid, succinct claims;
those with wild, but plausible claims;
those with wild, and sometimes unsubstantiated claims;
those with simple observations or concerns;
those who have come to troll;
those who have come to abuse, make libelous comments, or harass.
Comments by the last group tend to be flagged and removed by the moderator(s), who are likely Boris Barbour and the other two PubPeer management figures. But all others remain, which is what makes PubPeer so conflictual, because it has attractive and highly unattractive aspects.
One will never know the identity of all these types of anonymous commentators, and except for the use of extremely bad language, slang, or downright libelous name-calling (e.g. calling someone a fraud), we need this type of platform to allow a free level of discussion that is never possible with any journal's comment platform. Most scientists will know how to differentiate the wheat from the chaff, and can discern valid criticisms or concerns from noise, evasion or deflection. The most important thing is if what is written, either as a bounce from PubMed Commons, or directly here at PubPeer, has any value, and to whom?
In my opinion, PubPeer serves for me as a platform to begin to show how sad the state of affairs is in plant science. Comments might not always be perfect, or tone-perfect, and you will find that will ultimately always create enemies or irritate those who oppose you, or your ideas. But this is a risk that comes with using an anonymous tool. Those who use PubPeer should know that these risks exist.
I think the anonymous vs named argument is a dead horse. It is quite obvious that there are three groups: those who understand, and appreciate, anonymity; those who will always be skeptical and critical of it, and ultimately shun it; and those who see some benefit, and also some risk, but who would likely never venture to use it, either because they are of a traditional class of scientists/editors, or because they fear.
I think that ultimately that what is lacking is the respect and recognition of one of these groups of the other two. And because there is a lack of recognition and/or respect, there will always be frustration and passionate defense of the home turf opinions. That is so evident in the responses by select members of the public or scientific community to Prof. Blatt's two editorials.
I can personally see where Prof. Blatt's fears and concerns are coming from, and I respect his opinion and point of view, because that's all the editorials represent. I might not necessarily agree with his views in their entirety, but I understand that we need to respect his position, or at worst, respect his position in a civil way. Ultimately, one has to ask: has Blatt been a valuable asset to the plant science community, even if within his own restricted niche at Plant Physiology, and has something positive come from these two editorials?
The answers to these two questions are more than evident.
I thus suggest a new trajectory, at least for plant science. PubPeer has shown, in already hundreds of cases, that there are problems with the plant science literature. Problems that neither leaders like Blatt, Kamoun, or Zipfel knew or detected. But problems that ultimately drew them into the conflict that is, broadly speaking, a literature that is problematic, even in the top level plant science journals.
We only need two things to make this recipe of correcting the literature work:
a) the recognition that there are problems and that they need to be corrected;
b) action, i.e., getting editors and publishers to recognize these errors formally, and correcting the ills of the traditional peer review process.
Unless a) and b) take place, this whole discussion surrounding the anonymous voice is meaningless.
In closing, I should add that not all anonymous commentators are the same, and that not all necessarily agree with the position, or choice of words, employed by Boris Barbour or PubPeer.
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