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
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Association of hypertension, diabetes, stroke, cancer, kidney disease, and high-cholesterol with COVID-19 disease severity and fatality: A systematic review
This article has 3 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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Development and Validation of the Elecsys Anti-SARS-CoV-2 Immunoassay as a Highly Specific Tool for Determining Past Exposure to SARS-CoV-2
This article has 11 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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Progression/remission of COVID-19: data-driven recommendations for repeating SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid amplification tests
This article has 4 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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Association of State Stay-at-Home Orders and State-Level African American Population With COVID-19 Case Rates
This article has 3 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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A Counterfactual Graphical Model Reveals Economic and Sociodemographic Variables as Key Determinants of Country-Wise COVID-19 Burden
This article has 5 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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Extrapolation of Infection Data for the CoVid-19 Virus in 21 Countries and States and Estimate of the Efficiency of Lock Down
This article has 1 author:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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Anti-Phospholipid Antibodies in COVID-19 Are Different From Those Detectable in the Anti-Phospholipid Syndrome
This article has 27 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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Seroprevalence and epidemiological characteristics of immunoglobulin M and G antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 in asymptomatic people in Wuhan, China: a cross-sectional study
This article has 11 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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Effect of the COVID-19-induced lockdown on nutrition, health and lifestyle patterns among adults in Zimbabwe
This article has 2 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT
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Metabolomics and computational analysis of the role of monoamine oxidase activity in delirium and SARS-COV-2 infection
This article has 11 authors:Reviewed by ScreenIT