ClearBrief

Science

How Scientific Peer Review Actually Works

A short, honest explanation of peer review — what it is, what it catches, and what it doesn't.

By Daniel OkaforScience 2 min read 389 wordsFact-checked March 12, 2026
A printed scientific manuscript with editorial annotations in red ink on a desk.
A printed scientific manuscript with editorial annotations in red ink on a desk.

Originally published . Last reviewed and updated .

Contents(4 sections)
  1. 1. What peer review is
  2. 2. What peer review catches
  3. 3. What peer review does not catch
  4. 4. Preprints and post-publication review

Peer review is often described as the gold standard of scientific publishing. It is more accurately described as a filter: a structured way for editors to get independent feedback before publishing a manuscript. Like any filter, it catches some problems and misses others.

Understanding what peer review can and cannot do makes 'peer-reviewed' a more useful signal — and reduces the disappointment when peer-reviewed work later turns out to be wrong.

What peer review is

After a researcher submits a manuscript to a journal, an editor decides whether to send it out for review. Reviewers — typically two to four — are scientists with relevant expertise. They read the manuscript and write critiques. The editor weighs the critiques and decides to accept, request revisions, or reject.

Most journals use single- or double-blind review. Open peer review, where the reviewers' names are published with the paper, is growing but still a minority practice.

What peer review catches

Reviewers are good at identifying methodological problems, missing controls, weak statistical reporting, and overreach in the discussion section. They often suggest additional analyses and require the authors to address known limitations.

When peer review works well, the published paper is meaningfully clearer and more defensible than the submitted manuscript.

What peer review does not catch

Peer review does not, in most cases, detect fraud. Reviewers see the analyses authors choose to report, not the raw data. It also does not guarantee replication: a paper can be methodologically sound and still describe a finding that does not hold up when other groups try to reproduce it.

Peer review is a starting point for credibility, not a finishing line.

Preprints and post-publication review

Preprint servers — arXiv, bioRxiv, medRxiv, SSRN — publish manuscripts before peer review. Preprints accelerate the spread of research and allow open critique, but readers should treat them as preliminary.

Post-publication review on platforms like PubPeer can catch issues — image duplication, statistical errors — long after a paper appears in a journal.

StrengthLimit
Independent expert critiqueReviewers see only what's reported
Improves manuscript qualityDoes not guarantee replication
Filters out clearly weak workMisses many subtle problems
Establishes a public recordSlow; months to years
What 'peer-reviewed' tells you

Frequently asked questions

Is a preprint trustworthy?
Preprints are useful but unfiltered. Treat them as preliminary and watch for the eventual peer-reviewed version.
Do reviewers get paid?
Usually no. Peer review is unpaid work that researchers do as part of their professional role.
How long does peer review take?
Typically a few months. Some journals are faster; some specialty journals are slower.
Can a peer-reviewed paper be retracted?
Yes. Retraction Watch tracks retractions across journals and is a useful reference.

How we researched this

We reviewed primary sources, official guidance, and reporting from established outlets. Where data shifts quickly, we date each claim. ClearBrief editors fact-check every article before publication.

Sources

  1. What is peer review? Elsevier
  2. Retraction Watch Center for Scientific Integrity
  3. PubPeer PubPeer Foundation

Related reading

Found this useful? Share it with a friend.

This article is informational and not a substitute for professional advice. ClearBrief does not provide medical, legal, or financial services.