Published under GNU General Public License v3.0
Internet-Based Peer Review emulates the academic rigor (UX) of peer-review research in a public online network. This program was designed by Afilado Tumbas in the Network Theory Applied Research Institute's Forge Laboratory.
"Taylor & Francis Author Services" describes the peer review process as a "collaborative effort" between "independent...experts in [the] field," and study authors. https://authorservices.taylorandfrancis.com/publishing-your-research/peer-review/
IBPR has two primary effects on peer-review research:
Distributed review process
Distributed expertise development
Distributed Review Processing prevents bottlenecks of expertise for research qualifications and distribution of new information to the public
Templated submission formats at UI
Universal access to consolidated journal
Distributed Expertise Development
Users will not produce media in a vacuum but in a cloud of other users contributing dialogue to the science. As conflicts over facts arise, they will be settled within the confines of the distributed network and its governing protocols. The long-term result is user base that confirms and trains new users and holds knowledgeable users accountable to new data
Support Forge Labs by donating at https://ntari.org/getinvolved
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