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
-
Duration of COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine Effectiveness against Severe Disease
This article has 20 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Modeling COVID-19 disease biology to identify drug treatment candidates
This article has 7 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Permissive omicron breakthrough infections in individuals with binding or neutralizing antibodies to ancestral SARS-CoV-2
This article has 9 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Three-dose mRNA-1273 vaccination schedule: sufficient antibody response in majority of immunocompromised hematology patients
This article has 28 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Household Transmission of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 From Adult Index Cases With and Without Human Immunodeficiency Virus in South Africa, 2020–2021: A Case-Ascertained, Prospective, Observational Household Transmission Study
This article has 19 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
A year in the public life of COVID-19 and Vitamin D: Representation in UK news media and implications for health communications
This article has 4 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Clonal diversity determines persistence of SARS-CoV-2 epitope-specific T cell response
This article has 8 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Ocular tropism of SARS-CoV-2 with retinal inflammation through neuronal invasion in animal models
This article has 12 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Why were Twitter Users Obsessed with Vitamin D during the first year of the pandemic?
This article has 4 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
-
Admissions to a large tertiary care hospital and Omicron BA.1 and BA.2 SARS-CoV-2 polymerase chain reaction positivity: primary, contributing, or incidental COVID-19
This article has 9 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT