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I make six arguments for why double-blind peer review practices increase vulnerability to scientific integrity lapses over more transparent peer review practices: 1) Obscuring data from reviewers is detrimental; 2) Obscuring sponsorship makes bias harder to detect; 3) Author networks can be revealing; 4) Undue trust and responsibility are placed upon editors; 5) Double-blind reviews aren’t really all that blind; and 6) Willful blindness is not the answer to prestige bias. I offer an alternative approach that could provide a more transparent approach for ensuring scientific integrity and equity in publishing.
Christopher A. Mebane (Tue,) studied this question.