As noted in Process: prioritizing research, we ask people who suggest research to provide a numerical 0-100 rating:
We also ask people within our team to act as 'assessors' to give as second and third opinions on this. This 'prioritization rating' is one of the criteria we will use to determine whether to commission research to be evaluated (along with author engagement, publication status, our capacity and expertise, etc.) Again, see the previous page for the current process.
We are working on a set of notes on this, fleshing this out and giving specific examples. At the moment this is available to members of our team only (ask for access to "Guidelines for prioritization ratings (internal)"). We aim to share a version of this publicly once it converges, and once we can get rid of arbitrary sensitive examples.
I. This is not the evaluation itself. It is not an evaluation of the paper's merit per se:
Influential work, and prestigious work in influential areas may be highly prioritized regardless of its rigor and quality
The prioritization rating might consider quality for work that seems potentially impactful, which does not seem particularly prestigious or influential. Here aspects like writing clarity, methodological rigor, etc., might put it 'over the bar'. However, even here these will tend to be based on rapid and shallow assessments, and should not be seen as meaningful evaluations of research merit.
II. These ratings will be considered along with the discussion by the field team and the management. Thus is helpful if you give a justification and explanation for your stated rating.
Define/consider the following ‘attributes’ of a piece of research:
Global decision-relevance/VOI: Is this research decision-relevant to high-value choices and considerations that are important for global priorities and global welfare?
Prestige/prominence: Is the research already prominent/valued (esp. in academia), highly cited, reported on, etc?
Influence: Is the work already influencing important real-world decisions and considerations?
Obviously, these are not binary factors; there is a continuum for each. But for the sake of illustration, consider the following flowcharts.
If the flowcharts do not render, please refresh your browser. You may have to refresh twice.
"Fully baked": Sometimes prominent researchers release work (e.g., on NBER) that is not particularly rigorous or involved, which may have been put together quickly. This might be research that links to a conference they are presenting at, to their teaching, or to specific funding or consulting. It may be survey/summary work, perhaps meant for less technical audiences. The Unjournal tends not to prioritize such work, or at least not consider it in the same "prestigious" basket (although there will be exceptions). In the flowchart above, we contrast this with their "fully-baked" work.
Decision-relevant, prestigious work: Suppose the research is both ‘globally decision-relevant’ and prominent. Here, if the research is in our domain, we probably want to have it publicly evaluated. This is basically the case regardless of its apparent methodological strength. This is particularly true if it has been recently made public (as a working paper), if it has not yet been published in a highly-respected peer-reviewed journal, and if there are non-straightforward methodological issues involved.
Prestigious work that seems less globally-relevant: We generally will not prioritize this work unless it adds to our mission in other ways (see, e.g., our ‘sustainability’ and ‘credibility’ goals here). In particular we will prioritize such research more if:
It is presented in innovative, transparent formats (e.g., dynamic documents/open notebooks, sharing code and data)
The research indirectly supports more globally-relevant research, e.g., through…
Providing methodological tools that are relevant to that ‘higher-value’ work
Drawing attention to neglected high-priority research fields (e.g., animal welfare)
(If the flowchart below does not render, please refresh your browser; you may have to refresh twice.)
Decision-relevant, influential (but less prestigious) work: E.g., suppose this research might be cited by a major philanthropic organization as guiding its decision-making, but the researchers may not have strong academic credentials or a track record. Again, if this research is in our domain, we probably want to have it publicly evaluated. However, depending on the rigor of the work and the way it is written, we may want to explicitly class this in our ‘non-academic/policy’ stream.
Decision-relevant, less prestigious, less-influential work: What about for less-prominent work with fewer academic accolades that is not yet having an influence, but nonetheless seems to be globally decision-relevant? Here, our evaluations seem less likely to have an influence unless the work seems potentially strong, implying that our evaluations, rating, and feedback could boost potentially valuable neglected work. Here, our prioritization rating might focus more on our initial impressions of things like …
Methodological strength (this is a big one!)
Rigorous logic and communication
Open science and robust approaches
Engagement with real-world policy considerations
Again: the prioritization process is not meant to be an evaluation of the work in itself. It’s OK to do this in a fairly shallow way.
In future, we may want to put together a loose set of methodological ‘suggestive guidelines’ for work in different fields and areas, without being too rigid or prescriptive. (To do: we can draw from some existing frameworks for this [ref].)
This page is a work-in-progress
15 Dec 2023: Our main current process involves
Submitted and (internally/externally) suggested research
Prioritization ratings and discussion by Unjournal field specialists
Feedback from field specialist area teams
A final decision by the management team, guided by the above
See this doc (also embedded below) for more details of the proposed process.