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	  FIG Peer Review Journal
  |   FIG Peer Review Process
Peer review is a process whereby papers are reviewed by 
	  designated subject-matter experts. The aim of the peer review is to 
		  proof, assure and improve the quality of the paperoffer to the authors the possibility of an external check for 
		  their professional workoffer academic proof for a scientific publication Peer review is the system used to assess the quality of 
	  scientific research before it is published. Independent researchers in the 
	  same field scrutinise research papers for validity, significance and 
	  originality to help editors assess whether research papers should be 
	  published in their journal.  Questions the reviewer ask -  
		  Does the paper fit the standards and scope of the conference it is being 
	  considered for?Is the research question clear? Was the approach appropriate?Are the study design, methods and analysis appropriate to the question 
	  being studied?Is the study innovative or original?Does the study challenge existing paradigms or add to existing knowledge?Does it develop novel concepts?Does it matter?Are the methods described clearly enough for other researchers to 
	  replicate?Are the methods of statistical analysis and level of significance 
	  appropriate?Could presentation of the results be improved and do they answer the 
	  question?Are the conclusions appropriate? The processThis review is “double-blinded”, which means that the reviewers do not know who the authors are, and the authors do not 
	  know who the reviewers are. This reduces possible bias resulting from knowing who the authors are or 
	  where they
	  come from, work assessed on its own merits. Process diagram: 
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