Learn Before
Short Answer

You are peer-reviewing an unpublished manuscript that describes a new statistical procedure for analyzing longitudinal data. A graduate student in your department asks you if you know of any good statistical approaches for their longitudinal study. Apply the principle of peer review confidentiality to describe how you should respond to the student's request.

Question: You are peer-reviewing an unpublished manuscript that describes a new statistical procedure for analyzing longitudinal data. A graduate student in your department asks you if you know of any good statistical approaches for their longitudinal study. Apply the principle of peer review confidentiality to describe how you should respond to the student's request.

Sample answer: I should refuse to share the new statistical procedure described in the manuscript, explaining that I cannot discuss ideas from unpublished research under my review. I must advise them that they can learn about and use the procedure once the research is formally published.

Key points:

  • The reviewer must decline to share the specific new statistical procedure.
  • The reviewer must recognize that the ideas in the unpublished manuscript must remain secret.
  • The reviewer must note that the procedure can only be shared or used after it is formally published.

Rubric: The response must apply the peer review confidentiality rule to the scenario. It must indicate that the reviewer cannot share or recommend the new procedure, explaining that the ideas in the manuscript must remain secret until the research is formally published.

0

1

Updated 2026-05-26

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

KPU

Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

Related