论文标题
作者对论文的看法如何与合着者的看法和同行评审决定相比?
How do Authors' Perceptions of their Papers Compare with Co-authors' Perceptions and Peer-review Decisions?
论文作者
论文摘要
作者的看法如何与同行评审过程的结果和对他人的看法相吻合?在一场顶级计算机科学会议(Neurips 2021)中,有23,000多个提交的作者和9,000篇提交的论文,我们对作者进行了三个问题的调查:(i)他们的每篇论文预测可能接受的可能性,(ii)他们根据科学贡献的论文对自己的论文的看法等级,以及(iii)的评论,这些论文的变化是在他们的评论中的变化。显着结果是:(1)作者对论文的接受概率的高估大约三倍:中位数预测为70%,接受率约为25%。 (2)女性作者表现出比男性作者更高(统计学意义)的误解;被邀请担任元评论者或审阅者的作者的预测类似地校准,但比未邀请审查的作者要好。 (3)作者对两项提交的科学贡献的相对排名一般同意(93%)与预测的接受概率,但有7%的回应有7%的回应,在其中作者认为他们的更好的论文将面临更糟糕的结果。 (4)作者提供的排名不同意大约三分之一时间的同行评审决定;当合着者对共同撰写的论文进行排名时,共同作者以类似的速度不同意 - 大约是三分之一的时间。 (5)至少有30%的被接受和拒绝论文的受访者表示,他们对自己的论文的看法得到了改善。同行评审中的利益相关者应考虑这些发现,以确定同行评审的期望。
How do author perceptions match up to the outcomes of the peer-review process and perceptions of others? In a top-tier computer science conference (NeurIPS 2021) with more than 23,000 submitting authors and 9,000 submitted papers, we survey the authors on three questions: (i) their predicted probability of acceptance for each of their papers, (ii) their perceived ranking of their own papers based on scientific contribution, and (iii) the change in their perception about their own papers after seeing the reviews. The salient results are: (1) Authors have roughly a three-fold overestimate of the acceptance probability of their papers: The median prediction is 70% for an approximately 25% acceptance rate. (2) Female authors exhibit a marginally higher (statistically significant) miscalibration than male authors; predictions of authors invited to serve as meta-reviewers or reviewers are similarly calibrated, but better than authors who were not invited to review. (3) Authors' relative ranking of scientific contribution of two submissions they made generally agree (93%) with their predicted acceptance probabilities, but there is a notable 7% responses where authors think their better paper will face a worse outcome. (4) The author-provided rankings disagreed with the peer-review decisions about a third of the time; when co-authors ranked their jointly authored papers, co-authors disagreed at a similar rate -- about a third of the time. (5) At least 30% of respondents of both accepted and rejected papers said that their perception of their own paper improved after the review process. The stakeholders in peer review should take these findings into account in setting their expectations from peer review.