PEERRec: An AI-based approach to automatically generate recommendations and predict decisions in peer review

Prabhat Kumar Bharti, Tirthankar Ghosal, Mayank Agarwal, Asif Ekbal

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

One key frontier of artificial intelligence (AI) is the ability to comprehend research articles and validate their findings, posing a magnanimous problem for AI systems to compete with human intelligence and intuition. As a benchmark of research validation, the existing peer-review system still stands strong despite being criticized at times by many. However, the paper vetting system has been severely strained due to an influx of research paper submissions and increased conferences/journals. As a result, problems, including having insufficient reviewers, finding the right experts, and maintaining review quality, are steadily and strongly surfacing. To ease the workload of the stakeholders associated with the peer-review process, we probed into what an AI-powered review system would look like. In this work, we leverage the interaction between the paper’s full text and the corresponding peer-review text to predict the overall recommendation score and final decision. We do not envisage AI reviewing papers in the near future. Still, we intend to explore the possibility of a human–AI collaboration in the decision-making process to make the current system FAIR. The idea is to have an assistive decision-making tool for the chairs/editors to help them with an additional layer of confidence, especially with borderline and contrastive reviews. We use a deep attention network between the review text and paper to learn the interactions and predict the overall recommendation score and final decision. We also use sentiment information encoded within peer-review texts to guide the outcome further. Our proposed model outperforms the recent state-of-the-art competitive baselines. We release the code of our implementation here: https://github.com/PrabhatkrBharti/PEERRec.git.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)55-72
Number of pages18
JournalInternational Journal on Digital Libraries
Volume25
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Attention mechanism
  • Decision prediction
  • Deep neural network
  • Peer reviews
  • Recommendation score prediction

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Library and Information Sciences

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