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by throwawaygh
1507 days ago
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That's just another popularity contest with all of the exact same perverse incentives. How do you think people get on conference committees / journal boards? We should stop worrying about popularity contests (citation counts, prestige-signalling conference committees/paper venues, etc.). When we decide whether to retain an academic as a visiting scientist, consultant, etc., I am always the voice in the room encouraging folks to disregard everything except for one question: after having read 3 or 4 of this person's most relevant papers, do we think they can help us with the specific problems we face? When I sit on grant review committees I ignore all the academic prestige shit and ask: is this a real 10-15-30 year problem for a field, does that field matter to the funding agency's objectives, and does the description of the plan of attack have a good chance of success? I don't need to evaluate popularity contests to answer those questions. Popularity contests are low-effort short-cuts for the low-brow scientist/program manager. Best to ignore them if you have real problems and need real solutions. |
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I fear that the scientific community is not mature enough to do this properly and truthfully without some gamification though sadly, and funding commitees will want some kind of metric for "non-technical" people.
But maybe the only solution is to pass out funding based on random lottery tickets.