首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Journal of Womens Health >Are Female Applicants Disadvantaged in National Institutes of Health Peer Review? Combining Algorithmic Text Mining and Qualitative Methods to Detect Evaluative Differences in R01 Reviewers Critiques
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Are Female Applicants Disadvantaged in National Institutes of Health Peer Review? Combining Algorithmic Text Mining and Qualitative Methods to Detect Evaluative Differences in R01 Reviewers Critiques

机译:在国立卫生研究院同行评审中女性申请人是否处于不利地位?结合算法文本挖掘和定性方法来检测R01审稿人的评论中的评估差异

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摘要

>Background: Women are less successful than men in renewing R01 grants from the National Institutes of Health. Continuing to probe text mining as a tool to identify gender bias in peer review, we used algorithmic text mining and qualitative analysis to examine a sample of critiques from men's and women's R01 renewal applications previously analyzed by counting and comparing word categories.>Methods: We analyzed 241 critiques from 79 Summary Statements for 51 R01 renewals awarded to 45 investigators (64% male, 89% white, 80% PhD) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison between 2010 and 2014. We used latent Dirichlet allocation to discover evaluative “topics” (i.e., words that co-occur with high probability). We then qualitatively examined the context in which evaluative words occurred for male and female investigators. We also examined sex differences in assigned scores controlling for investigator productivity.>Results: Text analysis results showed that male investigators were described as “leaders” and “pioneers” in their “fields,” with “highly innovative” and “highly significant research.” By comparison, female investigators were characterized as having “expertise” and working in “excellent” environments. Applications from men received significantly better priority, approach, and significance scores, which could not be accounted for by differences in productivity.>Conclusions: Results confirm our previous analyses suggesting that gender stereotypes operate in R01 grant peer review. Reviewers may more easily view male than female investigators as scientific leaders with significant and innovative research, and score their applications more competitively. Such implicit bias may contribute to sex differences in award rates for R01 renewals.
机译:>背景:在更新美国国立卫生研究院的R01补助金方面,女性的成功率不及男性。继续探索文本挖掘作为在同行评审中识别性别偏见的工具,我们使用算法文本挖掘和定性分析来检查以前通过计数和比较单词类别分析的男女R01更新申请的批评样本。>方法::我们分析了2010年至2014年间授予威斯康星大学麦迪逊分校的45位研究人员(男性64%,白人89%,白人80%)的51个R01更新的79个摘要声明中的241个评论。我们使用了潜在的Dirichlet分配以发现评估性“主题”(即,高概率同时出现的单词)。然后,我们定性地检查了男性和女性调查员使用评估词的环境。我们还检查了控制调查员生产力的分配分数中的性别差异。>结果:文本分析结果显示,男性调查员在其“领域”被描述为“领导者”和“先锋”,具有“高度创新性”和“非常重要的研究”。相比之下,女性研究人员的特征是具有“专业知识”并且在“优秀”环境中工作。男性申请的优先级,方法和显着性得分明显更高,这不能通过生产率的差异来解释。>结论:结果证实了我们先前的分析表明,性别定型观念在R01资助同行评审中起作用。审稿人可能会比男性研究人员更容易将男性研究人员视为具有重大创新研究的科学领导者,并更有竞争力地为其应用程序打分。这种潜在的偏见可能会导致R01续签的奖励率出现性别差异。

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