Do grant proposal texts matter for funding decisions?: A field experiment

Publication date

2024-05-19

Authors

Simsek, MügeISNI 000000050612356X
de Vaan, Mathijs
van de Rijt, ArnoutISNI 0000000126521398

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Scientists and funding agencies invest considerable resources in writing and evaluating grant proposals. But do grant proposal texts noticeably change panel decisions in single blind review? We report on a field experiment conducted by The Dutch Research Council (NWO) in collaboration with the authors in an early-career competition for awards of 800,000 euros of research funding. A random half of panelists were shown a CV and only a one-paragraph summary of the proposed research, while the other half were shown a CV and a full proposal. We find that withholding proposal texts from panelists did not detectibly impact their proposal rankings. This result suggests that the resources devoted to writing and evaluating grant proposals may not have their intended effect of facilitating the selection of the most promising science.

Keywords

Grant proposal, Matthew effect, Peer review, Research funding, Science policy, General Social Sciences, Computer Science Applications, Library and Information Sciences

Citation

Simsek, M, de Vaan, M & van de Rijt, A 2024, 'Do grant proposal texts matter for funding decisions? A field experiment', Scientometrics, vol. 129, no. 5, pp. 2521-2532. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-024-04968-7