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Published byBethanie Powell Modified over 9 years ago
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CSR Advisory Council Meeting May 19, 2014 Editorial Board Review A Few Good Reviewers Don Schneider, Ph.D.
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Reviewer pools Past experience Cost considerations Toward Review by the Best
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Reviewer StatusNumbers HHMI300 NIH R37700 NAS2,000 R0126,000 CSR needs16,000 Reviewer Pools
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Format modeled on journal manuscript review First piloted in 2008 with 6 SBIR panels, just in time for TR01s, Challenge grants, DP1 etc. Two stages – First Stage – Mail reviewers – Second Stage – Editors Past Experience
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First Stage/Mail Reviewers Subject matter experts –Provide depth in review Focus on scientific and technical merit 2-3 first stage mail reviewers per application Submit full critiques Give overall impact and criterion scores –Overall impact scores not factored into final priority score
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Hold face-to-face meeting Recruit broad experts – Provide perspective in review (assign about 15 applications each) Focus on impact and significance Assign 3 second stage reviewers per application Consider first stage critiques in review Write overall impact paragraph Give overall impact score – Final priority score based on second stage only Second Stage/Editors
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Provides both depth and breadth in review Optimizes use of the best reviewers Scales well for large numbers of applications (second stage discusses a fraction of the applications) Rationale
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Perceived Advantages Involves no travel/teleconference for first stage reviewers Allows small, interactive face-to-face meetings Promotes better scoring and assessment of impact Lessens travel and lodging expenses and inconveniences
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Review# of ApplicationsCost/application Regular R01 F2F$518 DP1/Pioneer EB+I244$280 DP2/New Innov EB593$124 DP5/Early Indep EB+I84$875 Cost Considerations (Alicia Caffi)
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Recruitment of large numbers of reviewers Timeline – Tight, two sequential reviews – (in the 17 week cycle) More staff time required (SROs) Some sense of isolation by first stage reviewers Challenges
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Each application examined by at least 5 reviewers Interactive, thoughtful discussions Overall scoring by second stage members Reviewers and staff like final review products Review Outcomes
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Survey conducted by A Kopstein of reviewers participating in SBIR pilots 2008 Outcomes were generally positive – Majority willing to participate in either review stage in future – Editorial Board Review: Increases expert review »3/4 ths of respondents Preferred for their own applications »2/3 rds of respondents Survey
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Hopes for a few good reviewers? Discussion
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