What are Pre-Prints?

Table of Contents

Defining Pre-Prints

Pre-prints are research papers made publicly available by authors on open-access platforms before they undergo formal peer review, enabling rapid sharing and community feedback.

Why Do They Matter?

Pre-prints are being adopted by the scientific community for several reasons:

Issues and Challenges

While preprints can benefit researchers in many ways, they come with their own set of challenges:

Absence of Initial Peer Review:

Pre-prints are made public before formal peer review, which means the research is not yet validated. However, pre-prints may still receive informal feedback through comments on preprint platforms, allowing for early critique and revision.

 

Variability in Quality:

The absence of traditional peer review means the quality of pre-prints can vary widely, presenting a mix of both high-quality and less rigorous research.

Ethical Concerns

There are ethical concerns related to the potential misuse of preprints, such as premature media coverage or use of unvalidated findings to influence public policy or clinical practice.

Intellectual Property Risks

Posting pre-prints might expose researchers to the risk of their ideas being stolen or scooped by other scientists who may develop the ideas further without giving proper credit.

Impact on Journal Acceptance

Some journals may be reluctant to accept manuscripts that have already been posted as pre-prints, though this is becoming less of an issue as more journals are adopting preprint-friendly policies.

Data Integrity

The lack of standardised data reporting in pre-prints can lead to inconsistencies and difficulties in interpreting the results, which may affect the reproducibility and reliability of the research.

More Resources

Learn more about pre-prints and their role in the open research ecosystem through these selected Open Access resources:

ASAPbio’s “Preprints: Information and FAQs.”

Center for Open Science’s “A Guide to Preprints”

Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)’s “Preprints and Publication Ethics”

FORM’S “Normalising Pre-prints: The MENA Dialogue“