Repost: A proposal for a really fast statistics journal

Jeff Leek
2013-09-04

Editor’s note: This is a repost of a previous Simply Statistics column that seems to be relevant again in light of Marie Davidian’s really important column on the peer review process. You should also check out Yihui’s thoughts on this, which verge on the creation of a very fast/dynamic stats journal.  

I know we need a new journal like we need a good poke in the eye. But I got fired up by the recent discussion of open science (by Paul Krugman and others) and the seriously misguided Research Works Act- that aimed to make it illegal to deposit published papers funded by the government in Pubmed central or other open access databases.

I also realized that I spend a huge amount of time/effort on the following things: (1) waiting for reviews (typically months), (2) addressing reviewer comments that are unrelated to the accuracy of my work - just adding citations to referees papers or doing additional simulations, and (3) resubmitting rejected papers to new journals - this is a huge time suck since I have to reformat, etc. Furthermore, If I want my papers to be published open-access I also realized I have to pay at minimum $1,000 per paper.So I thought up my criteria for an ideal statistics journal. It would be accurate, have fast review times, and not discriminate based on how interesting an idea is. I have found that my most interesting ideas are the hardest ones to get published.  This journal would:

To achieve such a fast review time, here is how it would work. We would have a large group of Associate Editors (hopefully 30 or more). When a paper was received, it would be assigned to an AE. The AEs would agree to referee papers within 2 days. They would use a form like this:
  • Review of: Jeff’s Paper
  • Technically Correct: Yes
  • About statistics/computation/data analysis: Yes
  • Number of Stars: 3 stars
  • 3 Strengths of Paper (1 required):
  • This paper revolutionizes statistics
  • 3 Weakness of Paper (1 required):
    • The proof that this paper revolutionizes statistics is pretty weak
    • <li>
        because he only includes one example.
      </li>

That’s it, super quick, super simple, so it wouldn’t be hard to referee. As long as the answers to the first two questions were yes, it would be published.

So now here’s my questions:

  1. Would you ever consider submitting a paper to such a journal?
  2. Would you be willing to be one of the AEs for such a journal?
  3. Is there anything you would change?