GENDER FACTORS IN REVIEWER RECOMMENDATIONS FOR MANUSCRIPT PUBLICATION
- 1 December 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis
- Vol. 23 (4) , 539-543
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1990.23-539
Abstract
This study investigated whether the gender of manuscript authors affected reviewers' editorial decisions. Female and male reviewers for five behavioral journals were asked to evaluate identical manuscripts according to their usual criteria. Half the manuscripts were supposedly written by men and half by women. Male reviewers did not evaluate male- and female-authored manuscripts differently. Female reviewers accepted significantly more female-authored (62%) than male-authored (10%) manuscripts. Female-authored manuscripts were accepted significantly more often by female (62%) than by male (21%) reviewers. Information unrelated to the quality of the manuscript appears to have influenced reviewers' decisions. Implications for the journal review process are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- What's in an author's name? Differential evaluations of performance as a function of author's nameSex Roles, 1985
- Goldberg revisited: What's in an author's nameSex Roles, 1983
- Prejudice against women: Who, when, and why?Sex Roles, 1981
- When women evaluate women, nothing succeeds like success: The differential effects of status upon evaluations of male and female professional abilitySex Roles, 1978
- The Talking Platypus Phenomenon: Competency Ratings as a Function of Sex and Professional StatusPsychology of Women Quarterly, 1977
- Are Women Still Prejudiced against Women? A Replication and Extension of Goldberg's StudyThe Journal of Psychology, 1975
- Evaluation of the performance of women as a function of their sex, achievement, and personal history.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1971