Lower-rated publications do lower academics’ judgments of publication lists: Evidence from a survey experiment of economists

Publication date: June 2018Source: Journal of Economic Psychology, Volume 66Author(s): Nattavudh Powdthavee, Yohanes E. Riyanto, Jack L. KnetschAbstractPublications in leading journals are widely known to have a positive impact on economists’ judgments of the value of authors’ contributions and professional reputations. While conjectures that publications in lower-rated journals likely have a negative impact on such judgments are common, there have been virtually no direct tests of their validity. Our intent is to provide results from such a test, one that involved asking economists from 44 universities throughout the world to rate either a publication list with only higher-rated journals or a list with all of these but with additional publications in lower-rated journals. Our primary finding was that, holding other things constant, adding publications in lower-rated journals to what is typically considered a good publication record does have a significant negative impact on economists’ judgments of the value of the author’s contribution. Most implications of this bias suggest negative impacts on social welfare.
Source: Journal of Economic Psychology - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research