Institute of Health Services and Policy Research (Tamblyn), Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Ottawa, Ont.; Departments of Medicine (Tamblyn) and Epidemiology, and Biostatistics (Girard, Qian, Hanley), Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, Montréal, Que.
CMAJ. 2018 Apr 23;190(16):E489-E499. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.170901.
Peer review is used to determine what research is funded and published, yet little is known about its effectiveness, and it is suspected that there may be biases. We investigated the variability of peer review and factors influencing ratings of grant applications.
We evaluated all grant applications submitted to the Canadian Institutes of Health Research between 2012 and 2014. The contribution of application, principal applicant and reviewer characteristics to overall application score was assessed after adjusting for the applicant's scientific productivity.
Among 11 624 applications, 66.2% of principal applicants were male and 64.1% were in a basic science domain. We found a significant nonlinear association between scientific productivity and final application score that differed by applicant gender and scientific domain, with higher scores associated with past funding success and -index and lower scores associated with female applicants and those in the applied sciences. Significantly lower application scores were also associated with applicants who were older, evaluated by female reviewers only (v. male reviewers only, -0.05 points, 95% confidence interval [CI] -0.08 to -0.02) or reviewers in scientific domains different from the applicant's (-0.07 points, 95% CI -0.11 to -0.03). Significantly higher application scores were also associated with reviewer agreement in application score (0.23 points, 95% CI 0.20 to 0.26), the existence of reviewer conflicts (0.09 points, 95% CI 0.07 to 0.11), larger budget requests (0.01 points per $100 000, 95% CI 0.007 to 0.02), and resubmissions (0.15 points, 95% CI 0.14 to 0.17). In addition, reviewers with high expertise were more likely than those with less expertise to provide higher scores to applicants with higher past success rates (0.18 points, 95% CI 0.08 to 0.28).
There is evidence of bias in peer review of operating grants that is of sufficient magnitude to change application scores from fundable to nonfundable. This should be addressed by training and policy changes in research funding.
同行评议用于确定哪些研究得到资助和发表,但人们对其效果知之甚少,并且怀疑可能存在偏见。我们调查了同行评议的可变性以及影响拨款申请评分的因素。
我们评估了 2012 年至 2014 年期间向加拿大卫生研究院提交的所有拨款申请。在调整申请人的科研生产力后,评估了申请、主要申请人和评审员特征对总体申请评分的贡献。
在 11624 项申请中,66.2%的主要申请人为男性,64.1%的申请人从事基础科学领域的工作。我们发现,科研生产力与最终申请评分之间存在显著的非线性关联,这种关联因申请人的性别和科研领域而异,过去资助成功和 h-index 较高的申请人得分较高,女性申请人和从事应用科学的申请人得分较低。申请人年龄较大、仅由女性评审员(与仅由男性评审员相比,-0.05 分,95%置信区间[CI] -0.08 至-0.02)或评审员与申请人的科研领域不同(-0.07 分,95%CI -0.11 至-0.03),申请评分也显著较低。评审员对申请评分的一致性(0.23 分,95%CI 0.20 至 0.26)、评审员冲突的存在(0.09 分,95%CI 0.07 至 0.11)、预算请求较大(每 10 万美元增加 0.01 分,95%CI 0.007 至 0.02)和重新提交(0.15 分,95%CI 0.14 至 0.17)也与申请评分较高显著相关。此外,与专业知识较低的评审员相比,专业知识较高的评审员更有可能对过去成功率较高的申请人给予较高的评分(0.18 分,95%CI 0.08 至 0.28)。
同行评议在运营拨款中的偏见是存在的,其程度足以改变申请的可资助性。这应该通过研究资助的培训和政策变化来解决。