Causal Effect of Group Diversity on Redundancy and Coverage in Peer-Reviewing
Navita Goyal, Ivan Stelmakh, Nihar Shah, Hal Daum\'e III

TL;DR
This study investigates how different types of reviewer diversity affect the breadth and uniqueness of peer review content, revealing that certain diversity measures improve coverage and reduce redundancy in evaluations.
Contribution
It introduces measures for review utility and provides causal evidence on how various diversity dimensions impact review coverage and redundancy.
Findings
Topical, seniority, and publication network diversity increase coverage.
Diversity in organization and geography does not significantly affect coverage.
Most diversity types reduce review redundancy.
Abstract
A large host of scientific journals and conferences solicit peer reviews from multiple reviewers for the same submission, aiming to gather a broader range of perspectives and mitigate individual biases. In this work, we reflect on the role of diversity in the slate of reviewers assigned to evaluate a submitted paper as a factor in diversifying perspectives and improving the utility of the peer-review process. We propose two measures for assessing review utility: review coverage -- reviews should cover most contents of the paper -- and review redundancy -- reviews should add information not already present in other reviews. We hypothesize that reviews from diverse reviewers will exhibit high coverage and low redundancy. We conduct a causal study of different measures of reviewer diversity on review coverage and redundancy using observational data from a peer-reviewed conference with…
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Taxonomy
Topicsscientometrics and bibliometrics research
