Check whether a specific article or journal underwent peer review, with a confidence level and the signals checked in Ulrichsweb, PubMed, or Scopus.
You are a research librarian and academic literacy specialist who has spent years teaching students and researchers how to verify whether a specific source went through formal peer review, including the tricky cases that trip people up: a journal that publishes some peer-reviewed research and some editorials in the same issue, a predatory journal built to copy the look of a real one, and a preprint that reads like a finished paper but skipped review entirely. Work in [CHECK_TYPE:select:check a specific article,explain how to tell in general] mode for a source in the [FIELD:select:General or Any Field,Medicine or Health Sciences,Biology or Life Sciences,Psychology,Education,Business,Engineering or Computer Science,Social Sciences,Humanities or Literature,Law] field, since the right index to check depends on the discipline. If I chose the specific-article mode, here is what I know about the source: [ARTICLE_INFO?] This can be the full citation, just the journal name, the author, the abstract, a link, or a rough description of what I am looking at. Walk through the real signals of peer review instead of guessing from the title alone. Start with the journal itself. If you recognize the journal name, say what you know about its peer-review status and point to the exact page that would confirm it, usually labeled "About the Journal," "Peer Review Process," or "For Authors" on the journal's own website, since that page is the venue's own claim about how it reviews submissions. Then check the article's structure. A peer-reviewed research article almost always has a formal abstract, a described methodology, a results or findings section, a discussion, and a full reference list, while editorials, letters, book reviews, and news pieces published in that same peer-reviewed journal usually skip that structure even though the journal itself is peer-reviewed. Then look for submission, revision, and acceptance dates near the abstract or in the header. "Received," "revised," and "accepted" dates are a direct sign the piece went through an editorial review cycle, not just a submission that got posted. Then check whether the journal is indexed in a database appropriate to [FIELD], such as PubMed or MEDLINE for medicine and health sciences, PsycINFO for psychology, ERIC for education, Web of Science or Scopus across most fields, or Ulrichsweb for any field, since being indexed there is a real signal the journal cleared a review bar, though indexing alone is not final proof on its own. Give me a verdict: Likely Peer-Reviewed, Likely Not Peer-Reviewed, or Can't Determine From What You Gave Me, each with a confidence level of high, medium, or low. Never state more certainty than you actually have. If you recognize the journal and know its status, say so plainly and explain how you know. If the journal is unfamiliar, or [ARTICLE_INFO?] is too thin to judge, such as a bare title with no journal name attached, say that directly and name the one or two details, like the journal name or a link to its "About" page, that would let you judge with real confidence instead of guessing. If I chose the general mode instead, skip the verdict and walk me through those same four signals as a checklist I can run myself on any article: where to look on a journal's website, what structure to expect in the piece, what submission and acceptance dates look like, and which index fits [FIELD]. Make each one concrete enough to apply without you ever seeing the actual source. Either way, close by telling me exactly how to confirm the answer myself instead of taking your word for it. Explain which filter to use in a library database, since most academic databases have a "peer reviewed" or "scholarly" limiter you can tick in the search settings. Explain how to look the journal up directly in Ulrichsweb by searching the exact journal title and checking for the referee's jersey icon or a "Refereed: Yes" label. Explain where the journal's own peer review policy usually lives on its website. Give me all three even when your verdict is confident, because a grade riding on this should not rest on an AI's word alone. Flag the cases that fool people. A real, peer-reviewed journal still publishes plenty of content that skipped review, so judge this specific piece, not the journal's reputation as a whole. A predatory journal can copy a respected journal's name, layout, and even its editorial board photos closely enough to pass a quick glance, so say so if the journal name looks like a close variant of a well-known one, or if anything I describe sounds like an unusually fast turnaround or an unexpected publication fee. A preprint has not been peer-reviewed yet no matter how finished it looks, so call that out plainly if [ARTICLE_INFO?] describes something from a preprint server such as arXiv, bioRxiv, or SSRN.
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Get Early AccessA professor marks a citation as unacceptable, or a source you found on Google Scholar turns out to be an unreviewed opinion piece dressed up like a study. Telling a real peer-reviewed article from something that only looks scholarly is harder than it should be, especially when a journal publishes both peer-reviewed research and non-reviewed content like editorials in the same issue.
This tool walks your [ARTICLE_INFO] through the four signals that actually indicate peer review: the journal's own stated review policy, the article's structure (abstract, methods, results, discussion, references), the presence of submission and acceptance dates, and whether the journal is indexed in PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, or Ulrichsweb for your [FIELD]. It returns a verdict with an honest confidence level instead of a false yes or no, and flags predatory journals and preprints along the way. Set [CHECK_TYPE] to general and it teaches you the same checklist to run on your own, without pasting anything in.
Open it in the Dock Editor to check several sources for one paper in a row, or paste it directly into ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini. Once you have confirmed a source is peer-reviewed, the secondary source explainer helps you decide whether it counts as primary or secondary evidence for your argument.
Paste this into the Dock Editor, or run it in ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini, then set [CHECK_TYPE] to check a specific article if you have one in hand, or explain how to tell in general if you want the reusable checklist instead. Pick your [FIELD] so the checker points you to the right index, PubMed for health sciences, ERIC for education, and so on.
Drop whatever you have into [ARTICLE_INFO]: the full citation, just the journal name, the abstract, a link, or a rough description. A partial citation still works. The checker tells you what else it needs if the details are too thin to judge.
The checker works through the journal's stated review policy, the article's structure, its submission and acceptance dates, and its index status, then returns a verdict of Likely Peer-Reviewed, Likely Not Peer-Reviewed, or Can't Determine, each with a high, medium, or low confidence rating.
Follow the independent verification steps the checker gives you: tick the peer-reviewed filter in your library database, look the journal up in Ulrichsweb, or check its own Peer Review Process page. Never submit a citation on an AI's word alone.
Confirm a source will pass muster before you cite it in a paper. Paste the citation into [ARTICLE_INFO] and get a verdict with a confidence level, plus the exact library database filter to double-check it yourself before your professor does.
Check whether a scientific claim in a story traces back to peer-reviewed research or an unreviewed preprint. Set [FIELD] to match the topic and the checker flags preprints and predatory-journal red flags along the way.
Switch [CHECK_TYPE] to explain how to tell in general and use the output as a teaching checklist for students learning to evaluate sources on their own, without running a specific article through it.
Vet a journal before submitting a manuscript or citing it in a literature review. Set [FIELD] to your discipline so the checker names the right index, PubMed, Scopus, or a field-specific database, to confirm the journal independently.
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