You can limit many journal articles in EBSCOHost databases to "Scholarly/Peer Reviewed." How does EBSCO determine what journals fall into this classification?
From the EBSCOHost website:
About Peer Review Policy
EBSCO Publishing Peer Review Policy
I. Introduction
In order to consistently assign peer-review status to titles on our products, EBSCO Publishing has established the following guidelines for assigning peer-review.
II. Definition of peer-review
Peer-review is defined by EBSCO Publishing as:
- Blind Peer-Review—articles appearing in a journal are sent outside of the journal's publishing or sponsoring organization for review by external reviewer(s) who are unaware of the author's identity. A double-blind peer-review process is one by which the author of the article is unknown to the reviewers and the reviewers of the article are unknown to the author.
- Editorial Board Peer-Review—articles appearing in a journal are reviewed by an internal board of editors and not solely by one editor. The author's identity may be known or unknown.
- Expert Peer-Review—articles appearing in a journal are reviewed by experts (either internal or external to the journal) whose credentials are known and are experts within the subject matter of the article under review. The author's identity may be known or unknown.
III. Criteria for establishing peer-reviewed status
EBSCO uses the following sources to identify peer-reviewed journals:
- The journal’s website and/or The Serials Directory, an online directory of serials with descriptions
- The publisher of the journal
- Feedback from librarians and professors
- EBSCO Publishing staff librarians
IV. Review of the peer-review assignment process
EBSCO Publishing periodically conducts reviews of its peer-review assessments for quality control purposes.