Checking correctness in mathematical peer review.

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE Social Studies of Science Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-30 DOI:10.1177/03063127231200274
Christian Greiffenhagen
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Abstract

Mathematics is often treated as different from other disciplines, since arguments in the field rely on deductive proof rather than empirical evidence as in the natural sciences. A mathematical paper can therefore, at least in principle, be replicated simply by reading it. While this distinction is sometimes taken as the basis to claim that the results in mathematics are therefore certain, mathematicians themselves know that the published literature contains many mistakes. Reading a proof is not easy, and checking whether an argument constitutes a proof is surprisingly difficult. This article uses peer review of submissions to mathematics journals as a site where referees are explicitly concerned with checking whether a paper is correct and therefore could be published. Drawing on 95 qualitative interviews with mathematics journal editors, as well as a collection of more than 100 referee reports and other correspondence from peer review processes, this article establishes that while mathematicians acknowledge that peer review does not guarantee correctness, they still value it. For mathematicians, peer review 'adds a bit of certainty', especially in contrast to papers only submitted to preprint servers such as arXiv. Furthermore, during peer review there can be disagreements not just regarding the importance of a result, but also whether a particular argument constitutes a proof or not (in particular, whether there are substantial gaps in the proof). Finally, the mathematical community is seen as important when it comes to accepting arguments as proofs and assigning certainty to results. Publishing an argument in a peer-reviewed journal is often only the first step in having a result accepted. Results get accepted if they stand the test of time and are used by other mathematicians.

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在数学同行评审中检查正确性。
数学通常被视为与其他学科不同,因为该领域的论点依赖于演绎证据,而不是自然科学中的经验证据。因此,至少在原则上,一篇数学论文可以通过阅读来复制。虽然这种区别有时被视为声称数学结果是确定的基础,但数学家自己也知道发表的文献中包含许多错误。阅读一个证明并不容易,而检查一个论点是否构成证明则异常困难。这篇文章使用了对数学期刊投稿的同行评审,作为一个网站,裁判明确关心检查论文是否正确,从而可以发表。根据对数学期刊编辑的95次定性采访,以及100多份裁判报告和同行评审过程中的其他信件,这篇文章确定,尽管数学家承认同行评审不能保证正确性,但他们仍然重视它。对数学家来说,同行评审“增加了一点确定性”,尤其是与仅提交给arXiv等预印本服务器的论文形成对比。此外,在同行评审过程中,不仅在结果的重要性方面,而且在特定论点是否构成证据方面(特别是证据中是否存在实质性差距),都可能存在分歧。最后,当涉及到接受论点作为证据并为结果赋予确定性时,数学界被视为重要的。在同行评审的期刊上发表论点通常只是让结果被接受的第一步。如果这些结果经得起时间的考验,并被其他数学家使用,它们就会被接受。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Social Studies of Science
Social Studies of Science 管理科学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
45
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Social Studies of Science is an international peer reviewed journal that encourages submissions of original research on science, technology and medicine. The journal is multidisciplinary, publishing work from a range of fields including: political science, sociology, economics, history, philosophy, psychology social anthropology, legal and educational disciplines. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)
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Virtual diversity and the value-ladenness of science Silence of the labs. The commercial roots of the genomic commons From the bench to public policy: Enhancing public trust in science. Making expert advice public in a time of emergency: Independent SAGE and the contestation of science during the Covid pandemic in the UK.
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