Kern-Goldberger Adina R, James Richard, Berghella Vincenzo, Miller Emily S
Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
University of Pennsylvania Biomedical Library, Philadelphia, PA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2022 Jul;227(1):43-50.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2022.01.030. Epub 2022 Feb 1.
Gender-based bias during journal peer review can lead to publication biases and perpetuate gender inequality in science. Double-blind peer review, in which the names of authors and reviewers are masked, may present an opportunity for scientific literature to increase equity and reduce gender-based biases. This systematic review of studies evaluates the impact of double-blind vs single-blind peer review on the publication rates by perceived author gender.
The PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and Scopus electronic databases were searched using the terms "blind," "peer review," "gender," "woman," and "author." All published literature in the English language from database inception through 2020 was queried.
Prospective experimental and observational studies comparing double-blind to single-blind peer review strategies examining impact on publication decisions by author gender were included.
The extracted data were primarily descriptive and included information on study design, sample size, primary outcome, major findings, and scientific discipline. The studies were characterized on the basis of design and whether the results demonstrated an impact of double-blind peer review on review scores and publication decision by perceived author gender. This study was registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews or PROSPERO.
In total, 1717 articles were identified, 123 were reviewed, and 8 were included, encompassing 5 prospective experimental studies and 3 observational studies. Four studies demonstrated a difference in the acceptance rate or review score on the basis of perceived author gender, whereas the other 4 studies demonstrated no differences when the author gender was anonymized.
Studies evaluating the impact of double-blind peer review on author gender demonstrate mixed results, but there is reasonable evidence that gender bias may exist in scientific publishing and that double-blinding can mitigate its impact. Further evaluation of the processes in place to create the body of evidence that clinicians and researchers rely on is essential to reduce bias, particularly in female-majority fields such as obstetrics and gynecology.
期刊同行评审过程中基于性别的偏见可能导致发表偏倚,并使科学界的性别不平等长期存在。双盲同行评审,即作者和评审人员的姓名均被隐藏,可能为科学文献增加公平性并减少基于性别的偏见提供契机。本系统综述通过研究来评估双盲与单盲同行评审对基于作者性别认知的发表率的影响。
使用“盲法”“同行评审”“性别”“女性”和“作者”等术语检索了PubMed、Embase、科学引文索引和Scopus电子数据库。查询了从数据库建立到2020年所有以英文发表的文献。
纳入比较双盲与单盲同行评审策略对基于作者性别的发表决策影响的前瞻性实验研究和观察性研究。
提取的数据主要为描述性数据,包括研究设计、样本量、主要结局、主要发现和学科领域等信息。根据研究设计以及结果是否表明双盲同行评审对基于作者性别认知的评审分数和发表决策有影响对这些研究进行了特征描述。本研究已在国际前瞻性系统综述注册库(PROSPERO)注册。
共识别出1717篇文章,对其中123篇进行了评审,纳入了8篇,包括5项前瞻性实验研究和3项观察性研究。4项研究表明基于作者性别认知的接受率或评审分数存在差异,而其他4项研究表明作者性别匿名化时无差异。
评估双盲同行评审对作者性别的影响的研究结果不一,但有合理证据表明科学出版中可能存在性别偏见,且双盲可减轻其影响。进一步评估用于生成临床医生和研究人员所依赖的证据体系的过程对于减少偏见至关重要,尤其是在产科和妇科等女性占多数的领域。