The Future of Peer Review Balancing AI and Human Expertise

The Peer Review Balance: AI and Human Expertise

Peer review is the cornerstone of scholarly publishing – but the current volume of submissions has it under pressure. Global scientific output now exceeds 5 million papers per year, placing the traditional gatekeeper infrastructure under immense strain since the pool of qualified experts remains static. This imbalance threatens the foundation of scholarly publishing and indicates that the editorial workflow faces total collapse without a new approach. 

Reviewer Fatigue and Decision Delays

The distribution of labor remains unsustainable for the global community as a small group of experts handles the majority of tasks. Specifically, the top 20% of reviewers manage approximately 80% of all review assignments, leading to severe reviewer fatigue. Publishers face high decline rates for invitations plus longer decision timelines as quality gaps appear when experts reach their limit. These downstream effects create direct risks for research integrity since exhaustion among scholars makes the status quo untenable for high-volume operations. 

AI Tools for Peer Review

AI-powered peer review offers a solution for high-volume, repetitive layers of the process. These tools execute initial manuscript screen tasks, plagiarism detection, and reviewer-to-manuscript matching. With an AI-assisted workflow, time burden on experts is reduced as submissions are filtered before they reach human eyes. While AI accelerates triage, it fails to replace expert judgment. Currently, academic publishers explore AI for plagiarism detection and automated copyediting to streamline the submission phase, reporting faster screen timelines through these advanced automated systems. 

The Risks of Over-Relying on AI  

Reliance on automation presents documented dangers for academic trust. Data indicates that approximately 21% of reviews at a major AI conference in 2025 were fully AI-generated. When AI systems handle evaluation without checks, the consequences are an impediment – hallucinated citations enter the record, and prompt-injection risks emerge as manuscripts are designed to manipulate AI reviewers. These prove that human oversight remains a necessity because genuine expertise is the only way to safeguard records. Automation helps, however it lacks the nuance of an expert mind to keep technical errors outside the scholarly record. 

The Human-Centric Strategy

The human-in-the-loop model represents the best path forward as human expertise is an essential complement to technology. AI handles rule-based tasks while humans provide evaluation of methodology, which ensures that experts interpret novel results and maintain consistent standards. This structured peer review ensures every decision remains defensible and humans retain final authority across the process. Expert human eyes detect subtle flaws and nuanced methodological errors that current technology may miss, helping protect research quality at scale. 

Managed Workflow Solutions

Publishers must adopt managed peer review systems that embed efficiency and accountability into every stage to preserve scholarly standards. Amnet serves as the strategic partner publishers need to navigate rising submission volumes without compromising research integrity

Our managed peer review services provide a clear, sustainable path forward by combining AI speed with rigorous human oversight that supports editorial goals, preserves the record of science through advanced management and expert precision, and bridges the gap between high volume and high standards. Connect with us to know more.

Sources
  • PublishingState
  • Human–AI Complementarity in Peer Review – MDPI Publications, Dec 2025
  • 21% of peer reviews submitted to ICLR 2025 fully AI-generated – NATURE
  • Amnet Peer Review Management
Share on X
Share on Facebook
Share on LinkedIn
Share on WhatsApp
Email

Subscribe To Our Blog

Search

Our organization is committed to making our website accessible to everyone, including people with disabilities. We are pleased to report that the majority of our website is fully accessible and meets the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA. These guidelines provide a set of international standards for web accessibility and outline the requirements for making web content more accessible to people with disabilities.

However, we recognize that the chat bot is currently not fully accessible and we are working to improve its accessibility. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause and are committed to replace the chat bot with an accessible one.

If you have any questions or need assistance accessing any content on our website, please contact us at [email protected]. We will do our best to provide the information to you in an alternative format.
Thank you for your understanding.