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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 4/2019

01-04-2019 | Concise Research Reports

Laughter and the Chair: Social Pressures Influencing Scoring During Grant Peer Review Meetings

Authors: Elizabeth L. Pier, Joshua Raclaw, Molly Carnes, MD, MS, Cecilia E. Ford, Anna Kaatz

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 4/2019

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Excerpt

During NIH peer review meetings (“study sections”), scientists discuss and assign “priority scores” to grant applications that largely determine funding outcomes. Although the final priority score is an average of each panelist’s score, their individual score is anchored to the scores declared publicly by those scientists (usually three) assigned to review and report on the grant application in detail. We have identified “score calibration talk” (SCT), a discourse practice where a study section member discusses and interprets the scoring rather than the content of a grant application. We found two forms: self-initiated SCT, when a panelist provides commentary about their own scoring (e.g., “So I gave it a four, which was probably generous”); and other-initiated SCT, when a panelist challenges the scoring of an assigned reviewer (e.g., “Yeah, that was generous.”). Only other-initiated SCT correlated with changes from the initial to the final score among the assigned reviewers of NIH R01 applications.1 To gain insights into which interactional patterns accompanying SCT influence score change, we examined in detail the five cases of SCT followed by immediate declaration of a score change. …
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Metadata
Title
Laughter and the Chair: Social Pressures Influencing Scoring During Grant Peer Review Meetings
Authors
Elizabeth L. Pier
Joshua Raclaw
Molly Carnes, MD, MS
Cecilia E. Ford
Anna Kaatz
Publication date
01-04-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 4/2019
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-018-4751-9

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