ScreenIT
The Automated Screening Working Groups is a group of software engineers and biologists passionate about improving scientific manuscripts on a large scale. Our members have created tools that check for common problems in scientific manuscripts, including information needed to improve transparency and reproducibility. We have combined our tools into a single pipeline, called ScreenIT. We're currently using our tools to screen COVID preprints.
Latest preprint reviews
-
Suppression of a SARS-CoV-2 outbreak in the Italian municipality of Vo’
This article has 91 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Serologic SARS-CoV-2 Testing in Healthcare Workers with Positive RT-PCR Test or Covid-19 Related Symptoms
This article has 6 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
How Healthcare Congestion Increases Covid-19 Mortality: Evidence from Lombardy, Italy*
This article has 2 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
The importance of saturating density dependence for population-level predictions of SARS-CoV-2 resurgence compared with density-independent or linearly density-dependent models, England, 23 March to 31 July 2020
This article has 4 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Evidence for treatment with estradiol for women with SARS-CoV-2 infection
This article has 8 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Efficacy of moist heat decontamination against various pathogens for the reuse of N95 respirators in the COVID-19 emergency
This article has 13 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Resveratrol and Copper for treatment of severe COVID-19: an observational study (RESCU 002)
This article has 12 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
The relative effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions on wave one Covid-19 mortality: natural experiment in 130 countries
This article has 5 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Lack of antibodies against seasonal coronavirus OC43 nucleocapsid protein identifies patients at risk of critical COVID-19
This article has 20 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment for Airborne Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 via Breathing, Speaking, Singing, Coughing, and Sneezing
This article has 6 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT