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
-
Is Hydroxychloroquine Safe During Pregnancy? Observations from Penn Medicine
This article has 3 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Internet search patterns reveal clinical course of COVID-19 disease progression and pandemic spread across 32 countries
This article has 2 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Ultra-fast and onsite interrogation of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in waters via surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS)
This article has 13 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
A pooled testing strategy for identifying SARS-CoV-2 at low prevalence
This article has 22 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Model of a Testing-and-Quarantine Strategy to Slow-Down the COVID-19 Outbreak in Guadeloupe
This article has 4 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
30-day mortality in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 during the first wave of the Italian epidemic: A prospective cohort study
This article has 25 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Post-exposure prophylaxis or pre-emptive therapy for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2): study protocol for a pragmatic randomized-controlled trial
This article has 23 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Anxiety Levels Among Female Iranian Health Care Workers During the COVID-19 Surge: A Cross-sectional Study
This article has 8 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Correlation of Coagulation Parameters With Clinical Outcomes During the Coronavirus-19 Surge in New York: Observational Cohort
This article has 8 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
COVID-19 and patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases undergoing pharmacological treatments: a rapid living systematic review
This article has 13 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT