| Literature DB >> 31844596 |
Nyssa J Silbiger1, Amber D Stubler2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Peer reviewed research is paramount to the advancement of science. Ideally, the peer review process is an unbiased, fair assessment of the scientific merit and credibility of a study; however, well-documented biases arise in all methods of peer review. Systemic biases have been shown to directly impact the outcomes of peer review, yet little is known about the downstream impacts of unprofessional reviewer comments that are shared with authors.Entities:
Keywords: Intersectionality; Peer review; STEM; Underrepresented minorities
Year: 2019 PMID: 31844596 PMCID: PMC6911688 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.8247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Examples of unprofessional peer reviews from survey respondents.
Permission to publish these comments was explicitly given by respondents who certified the comments were reported accurately.
Figure 2Survey demographics.
(A) Representative career stages (N = 11), (B) scientific disciplines (N = 14) and (C) countries (N = 46) from survey participants. Color in subset (C) represents number of surveys from each country where white is 0.
Figure 3Results from Bayesian ordinal logistic regression.
Figure shows the probability of selecting a 1–5 for (A) doubting scientific aptitude (N = 617), (B) delayed productivity (N = 620) and (C) delayed career advancement (N = 618) across intersectional groups after receiving an unprofessional peer review. Data are medians and two-tailed 95% BCI. Colors represent level of impact with the lightest (1) as no perceived impact and the darkest (5) as the highest impact. Women and non-binary people were grouped for the statistical analysis to represent marginalized genders in STEM fields.