Peer Review Process You are reviewing your fellow student's paper in order to help him/her improve it. There are three levels of working on a paper: * revising, * editing, and * proofreading. Revising is about the main ideas (or any missing ideas). Editing is about cleaning up sentences here and there. Proofreading is about misspellings, incorrect figure references, etc. Do you see any analogies with strategic, tactical, and operational decisions? At the peer-review stage, help your fellow student in _revising_. Look for good ideas that should be emphasized. Try to think of experiments that didn't get done that should get done. Look for mathematical mistakes. This isn't to say that grammar and spelling are unimportant. Indeed, each student is responsible for their own grammar and spelling. It's just that we're putting off that kind of editing until after the main ideas are in place. So, here are your duties as a peer reviewer: 0. Read the paper. Try to not communicate with the author other than by reading the paper. 1. Highlight any paragraphs that confused you as a reader. 2. Imagine how to improve it by adding further analyses, experiments, etc. and write those ideas down. 3. Also note down any explanations that were missing that would've helped you understand things better. 4. Write down any mathematical mistakes you noticed. 5. Write a short (<= 50-word) and medium (<= 200-word) abstract for the paper. 6. Fill out the grading rubric as if you were the professor giving the paper a grade. This is a good quantitative way to show the paper's author where the paper needs to be improved. Some thoughts about filling out the grading rubric: * The scores you enter _will not_ affect the author's grade in the course. * Your fellow students are depending on your honest (but diplomatic) feedback. Giving top marks in each category to help someone feel happy and/or like you will backfire in the long run if they actually needed to be warned about something. * It's possible that your score for doing peer review will depend on how the marks you give correspond to the ones your professor gives. Reminder on abstracts: An abstract is a concise summary of the whole paper, not just the intro or just the conclusions, and is understandable without reference to the rest of the paper. It should contain no citation to other published work. It should contain little or no math notation. It should include key words that someone might be searching for using Google, etc. (but no need to repeat what's already in the title).