Psychology research from Western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic (WEIRD) countries, especially from the United States, receives more scientific attention than research from non-WEIRD countries. We investigate one structural way that this inequality might be enacted: mentioning the sample's country in the article title. Analyzing the current publication practice of four leading social psychology journals (Study 1) and conducting two experiments with U.S. American and German students (Study 2), we show that the country is more often mentioned in articles with samples from non-WEIRD countries than those with samples from WEIRD countries (especially the United States) and that this practice is associated with less scientific attention. We propose that this phenomenon represents a (perhaps unintentional) form of structural discrimination, which can lead to underrepresentation and reduced impact of social psychological research done with non-WEIRD samples. We outline possible changes in the publication process that could challenge this phenomenon.
Mentioning the Sample’s Country in the Article’s Title Leads to Bias in Research Evaluation
Rotem Kahalon,V. Klein,Inna Ksenofontov,J. Ullrich,Stephen C. Wright
Published 2021 in Social Psychology and Personality Science
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- Publication year
2021
- Venue
Social Psychology and Personality Science
- Publication date
2021-07-08
- Fields of study
Psychology
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