Implicit Bias. McNutt, M. Science, 352(6289):1035, May, 2016.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
[Excerpt] [...] To explore the extent of implicit bias in peer review, and what can be done to counter it, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS, the publisher of Science) recently convened a day-long forum of editors, publishers, funders, and experts on implicit bias in Washington, DC [...] [\n] [...] Scientific publishers such as the American Chemical Society (ACS) and the American Geophysical Union (AGU) find that female authors are published either at a rate proportional to that at which they submit to those journals, or at proportionally higher rates, as compared with their male colleagues. One expert on bias in peer review suggested that editors and program managers who make final decisions in single-blind review systems compensate for implicit bias to ensure an equitable outcome. [\n] However, when panelists examined international representation in the journals, they noted that publication rates are not proportional to the rates at which papers are submitted from various nations. [...] There are several possible explanations for the continued persistence of geographic disparities in acceptance rates, other than geographic variations in quality. For example, reviewers might infer the country of origin from other clues in the paper (such as field sites, special facilities, or use of English), even without names, institutions, and addresses. [\n] [...] [\n] One possible direction, suggested by the forum, to reduce implicit bias is for journals to broaden, diversify, and internationalize their pool of editors and reviewers. Even journals already conducting double-blind reviews could benefit from such actions. This would allow a more equitable distribution of the reviewing process across a discipline's scientific community. To meet the demand, journals will need to devise new means of identifying a more diverse pool of experienced reviewers, or train a new cohort in the journal's expectations for review quality and reviewer ethics. Reviewers who repeatedly provide useful advice could eventually serve on editorial boards. [\n] Implicit bias is, by definition, subconscious, making it an easy issue for any individual to overlook or not even realize, and thus difficult to address. Some processes, such as double-blind review, attempt to overcome such prejudice, but blinding in all dimensions is a challenge. Building a peer evaluation system that is truly as diverse as the publication enterprise we desire would be a big step toward eliminating unfair bias that harms the scientific enterprise.
@article{mcnuttImplicitBias2016,
  title = {Implicit Bias},
  author = {McNutt, M.},
  year = {2016},
  month = may,
  volume = {352},
  pages = {1035},
  issn = {0036-8075},
  doi = {10.1126/science.aag1695},
  abstract = {[Excerpt]

[...] To explore the extent of implicit bias in peer review, and what can be done to counter it, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS, the publisher of Science) recently convened a day-long forum of editors, publishers, funders, and experts on implicit bias in Washington, DC [...]

[\textbackslash n] [...] Scientific publishers such as the American Chemical Society (ACS) and the American Geophysical Union (AGU) find that female authors are published either at a rate proportional to that at which they submit to those journals, or at proportionally higher rates, as compared with their male colleagues. One expert on bias in peer review suggested that editors and program managers who make final decisions in single-blind review systems compensate for implicit bias to ensure an equitable outcome.

[\textbackslash n] However, when panelists examined international representation in the journals, they noted that publication rates are not proportional to the rates at which papers are submitted from various nations. [...] There are several possible explanations for the continued persistence of geographic disparities in acceptance rates, other than geographic variations in quality. For example, reviewers might infer the country of origin from other clues in the paper (such as field sites, special facilities, or use of English), even without names, institutions, and addresses.

[\textbackslash n] [...]

[\textbackslash n] One possible direction, suggested by the forum, to reduce implicit bias is for journals to broaden, diversify, and internationalize their pool of editors and reviewers. Even journals already conducting double-blind reviews could benefit from such actions. This would allow a more equitable distribution of the reviewing process across a discipline's scientific community. To meet the demand, journals will need to devise new means of identifying a more diverse pool of experienced reviewers, or train a new cohort in the journal's expectations for review quality and reviewer ethics. Reviewers who repeatedly provide useful advice could eventually serve on editorial boards.

[\textbackslash n] Implicit bias is, by definition, subconscious, making it an easy issue for any individual to overlook or not even realize, and thus difficult to address. Some processes, such as double-blind review, attempt to overcome such prejudice, but blinding in all dimensions is a challenge. Building a peer evaluation system that is truly as diverse as the publication enterprise we desire would be a big step toward eliminating unfair bias that harms the scientific enterprise.},
  journal = {Science},
  keywords = {*imported-from-citeulike-INRMM,~INRMM-MiD:c-14042737,~to-add-doi-URL,cognitive-biases,cognitive-structure,gender-biases,publication-bias,publish-or-perish,science-ethics},
  lccn = {INRMM-MiD:c-14042737},
  number = {6289}
}

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