I think that this is the same as "peer-reviewed" article. Usually peer-reviewed articles are found in scholarly, academic type of journals. Peer-reviewed means that the article in the journal was analyzed, or reviewed, by the author's peers. It has to do a lot with credibility. When an author submits an article to a peer-reviewed publication, the editors of that publication will have a group of experts analyze and check the content and resources to make sure that the article is legitimate and NOT made-up. Many teachers in college prefer the student to use "peer-review" articles to support their research papers. The following related link can give a little more information on how to find peer-reviewed articles.
You don't, wikis are meant to be edited.
No, a systematic review is not considered a peer-reviewed article.
Peer editing is allowed, most teachers encourage that. Definitely get your paper peer edited.
Yes, the journal article published by MDPI is peer-reviewed.
Here's a really great article about explaining the peer review process: http://www.ehow.com/how_4765842_explain-peer-review-process.html
Yes, the articles on ResearchGate are not peer-reviewed.
Yes but by very experienced writers
It's me I just answered this 1
You can recognize a peer-reviewed journal article by looking for the journal's name, the author's credentials, a list of references, and a statement indicating that the article has been reviewed by experts in the field before publication.
When evaluating the credibility of a peer-reviewed article, consider the author's expertise, the publication's reputation, the research methodology used, the sources cited, and whether the article has been reviewed by other experts in the field.
When a scientific article is rejected during the peer review process, it is typically sent back to the author with feedback from the reviewers. The author can then revise the article based on the feedback and resubmit it to another journal for consideration.
To format an APA citation for a peer-reviewed journal article, follow this structure: Author(s). (Year). Title of the article. Title of the Journal, Volume(Issue), Page range. DOI or URL.