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Preprint

A preprint is a version of a scholarly paper posted publicly before it has been peer-reviewed by a journal or conference. Preprints enable researchers to share results quickly, establish priority for ideas, and invite feedback from the community.

The practice originated in the sciences with the rise of online repositories, notably arXiv, launched in 1991

Posting a preprint typically involves uploading a manuscript, choosing a license, and acquiring a persistent identifier.

Impact and concerns: Preprints speed dissemination and increase visibility, allow rapid feedback, and can improve reproducibility

Notable repositories include arXiv (physics, math, CS), bioRxiv, medRxiv, PsyArXiv, and others. Copyright and licensing vary;

for
physics
and
mathematics.
Since
then,
many
disciplines
use
discipline-specific
or
general
preprint
servers,
including
bioRxiv
and
medRxiv
in
the
life
sciences,
PsyArXiv
in
psychology,
and
others.
Preprints
are
usually
free
to
read
and
may
be
updated
as
the
work
evolves.
They
may
be
subsequently
submitted
to
a
traditional
peer-reviewed
journal;
in
many
fields
this
is
allowed
and
does
not
count
as
prior
publication.
through
shared
data
and
methods.
Risks
include
potential
misinterpretation
of
unreviewed
results,
incomplete
quality
checks,
and
concerns
about
media
coverage
or
patent
implications.
Version
control
and
clear
citation
practices
help
mitigate
confusion.
authors
often
retain
rights
and
choose
licenses
such
as
CC
BY.
Policies
toward
preprints
vary
by
journal
and
funder,
with
many
publishers
enabling
or
even
encouraging
preprint
posting.