地理偏见在知识传播中的作用:系统回顾与叙事综合。

IF 7.2 Q1 ETHICS Research integrity and peer review Pub Date : 2020-01-15 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s41073-019-0088-0
Mark Skopec, Hamdi Issa, Julie Reed, Matthew Harris
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引用次数: 40

摘要

背景:考察发表率和引用数的描述性研究表明,高收入国家(HIC)的地理倾斜,而来自低收入或中等收入国家(LMICs)的研究通常代表性不足。这被认为部分是由于审稿人和编辑对HIC来源的偏好;然而,在缺乏对照研究的情况下,不可能断言是否存在偏见,或者是否被审查文章的质量或相关性的变化解释了地理差异。本研究综合了来自随机和对照研究的证据,这些研究探讨了同行评审过程中的地理偏见。方法:进行系统回顾,以确定明确探讨地理偏倚在研究文章质量评估中的作用的研究。本综述只纳入了随机对照研究。检索了5个数据库以查找相关文章。对纳入的文章进行叙述性综合,以确定共同的发现。结果:通过系统文献检索,共检索到3501个题目,共检索到12个全文,通过检索全文参考书目,共检索到8个全文。在这些文章中,只有三篇是随机对照研究,研究了地理偏差的变异。一项研究发现,与低成本来源的摘要相比,高收入来源的摘要在研究的相关性和向同事推荐该研究的可能性方面获得了更高的评价分数。另一项研究发现,“顶尖大学”提交的论文被计算机科学会议接受的概率在统计上要高得多。其中两项研究显示,来自“高”院校和“低”院校的文章存在地理偏差。结论:三个纳入的研究中有两个确定了某种形式的地理偏见对同行评议的影响;然而,需要进一步强有力的实验证据来充分告知围绕这一主题的实践。尽管如此,审稿人和研究人员应该意识到作者和机构特征是否干扰了他们对研究的判断。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The role of geographic bias in knowledge diffusion: a systematic review and narrative synthesis.

Background: Descriptive studies examining publication rates and citation counts demonstrate a geographic skew toward high-income countries (HIC), and research from low- or middle-income countries (LMICs) is generally underrepresented. This has been suggested to be due in part to reviewers' and editors' preference toward HIC sources; however, in the absence of controlled studies, it is impossible to assert whether there is bias or whether variations in the quality or relevance of the articles being reviewed explains the geographic divide. This study synthesizes the evidence from randomized and controlled studies that explore geographic bias in the peer review process.

Methods: A systematic review was conducted to identify research studies that explicitly explore the role of geographic bias in the assessment of the quality of research articles. Only randomized and controlled studies were included in the review. Five databases were searched to locate relevant articles. A narrative synthesis of included articles was performed to identify common findings.

Results: The systematic literature search yielded 3501 titles from which 12 full texts were reviewed, and a further eight were identified through searching reference lists of the full texts. Of these articles, only three were randomized and controlled studies that examined variants of geographic bias. One study found that abstracts attributed to HIC sources elicited a higher review score regarding relevance of the research and likelihood to recommend the research to a colleague, than did abstracts attributed to LIC sources. Another study found that the predicted odds of acceptance for a submission to a computer science conference were statistically significantly higher for submissions from a "Top University." Two of the studies showed the presence of geographic bias between articles from "high" or "low" prestige institutions.

Conclusions: Two of the three included studies identified that geographic bias in some form was impacting on peer review; however, further robust, experimental evidence is needed to adequately inform practice surrounding this topic. Reviewers and researchers should nonetheless be aware of whether author and institutional characteristics are interfering in their judgement of research.

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