Scholar

Rasmus T. Pedersen

H-index: 11
Political science 34%
Communication & Media Studies 24%

Reposted by: Rasmus T. Pedersen

markrubin.bsky.social
"Are review teams getting too involved in the revision of manuscripts?"

dx.doi.org/10.1177/1548...
When I began my academic career in the 1970s as a graduate student the journal review process was focused on determining whether submitted research made a contribution to
knowledge and was presented clearly. Rejection rates
were very high at the top tier journals, just as today. But
as both an author and reviewer, I have noticed some
rather dramatic changes over time, especially for empirical
articles. Different from today, well-designed research
testing important issues could be published even if it was
not especially novel or presented counterintuitive hypotheses. Even well-designed replication studies were published
(McKinley, 2010). In fact, the Academy of Management
Journal’s Research Notes and the Journal of Applied
Psychology’s Short Notes were explicitly for replication
studies and those for which the hypotheses were not supported. Also, back then, papers granted revise and resubmit
opportunities were typically accepted after one, and in some
cases two revisions. It was not until the 1990s that I started
noticing that manuscripts along with editor and reviewer
comments were getting longer and the number of revisions
requested increasing while at the same time becoming more
common for revise and resubmit papers to be rejected.1
ollefolke.bsky.social
Update: We submitted the comment to the Journal of Population Economics, and today we got a desk reject with this motivation. However, we do not know their conclusion about the main results and why the paper was not retracted. Clearly, they do not hold. 1/4

Reposted by: Rasmus T. Pedersen

andreaslindqvist.bsky.social
Former commander of Pituffik Susan Meyers must have known that she would be fired for this.

But apparently she found there are bigger considerations at stake than keeping her command.

Question is if we'll see more of this sort in coming months?

Berlingske has obtained her leaked email

#Defence
rtpedersen.bsky.social
Well, our paper is part of a growing collection of great zombie papers on my computer 😊 (and definitely also my fault/responsibilty 😁)
rtpedersen.bsky.social
Congrats, Eunji! Looking forward to reading it
bjpols.bsky.social
NEW -

The Gendered Cost of Politics - cup.org/42favop

- Frederik Klaaborg Kjøller & @leneholmp.bsky.social

"the conjoint experiment reveals that women candidates state stronger preferences for equal working environments in politics than men..."

#OpenAccess
BJPolS abstract discussing the impact of sexism and harassment on political candidates in the 2021 Danish local elections. The study evaluates candidates' perceptions and the corresponding risk of victimization, with findings suggesting stronger repercussions for women candidates, preferences for double job size, and implications for advised oversights in politics.
rtpedersen.bsky.social
I'm pretty sure that ChatGPT isn't sentient, but I still can't help think that after a day of helping me debugging code, it somehow appreciates the tasks given by my youngest kid more
Here's the image of a cat in outer space! The feline is floating in a galaxy filled with stars, wearing an astronaut suit.
rtpedersen.bsky.social
Thanks for putting together this starter pack! I'd like to be added 😀
rtpedersen.bsky.social
Thanks for putting together this starter pack! I'd like to be added 😀
rtpedersen.bsky.social
Bluesky academics, lets get to know each other! Quote this & tell me: 1) a project you are working on & 2) an odd idea/theory you aren’t working on but keep thinking about

1) Online abuse of politicians
2) Political discontent and populism is, to a large extent, driven by “good-old-days-bias”
ollefolke.bsky.social
My and @johannarickne.bsky.social 's paper on the ”Class Ceiling in Politics” is now out in the APSR with open access! We describe the key findings below. 1/9

Reposted by: Rasmus T. Pedersen

rtpedersen.bsky.social
Women are more averse to abusive comments than men (and people are generally more averse to sexist comments when the comments were directed at women in politics). These results are, we think, important to understand how abuse of politicians may further marginalize women in politics. (4/4)
rtpedersen.bsky.social
Perceptions of abuse varied significantly depending on political ideology. Left-leaning citizens were more likely to view insults, sexism, and threats as abusive. Finally, gender plays an important role... (3/n)
rtpedersen.bsky.social
We found no partisan bias in how people respond to criticism and the different types of abuse. However, this does not mean that politics is inconsequential... (2/n)
rtpedersen.bsky.social
What do ordinary people think about online abuse of politicians? In a new paper, we show how citizens perceive criticism, insults, threats and sexist remarks directed at politicians on social media (open access link: ejpr.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...). Surprisingly... (1/n)
Abstract
Online abuse is becoming an increasingly pressing issue for democratic societies. Citizens play an important role in curtailing abuse as they often moderate online content through counter speech and by reporting abusive messages. However, we know little about when citizens actually perceive negative comments directed at politicians as being abusive, and the factors shaping these perceptions are also understudied. In this study, we therefore investigate how citizens perceive criticism, insults, threats and sexist remarks directed at politicians on social media. Based on a survey experiment with 2,000 Danish citizens, we show that citizens’ assessments of the abusiveness of such remarks are not only affected by the content of the messages, but also by political ideology, political trust and gender. Surprisingly, partisanship does not seem to substantively affect perceptions of abuse. Our study provides novel insights into what exactly citizens consider to be abusive behaviour on

Reposted by: Rasmus T. Pedersen

Reposted by: Rasmus T. Pedersen

rtpedersen.bsky.social
Not a bad idea, but is almost completely flat across the entire measure
rtpedersen.bsky.social
Non-correlation of the day. Among Danish voters, willingness to run for political office is correlated with the usual suspects: political interest (duh!), gender and age - But not with political trust. Don't even know if I expected pos or neg, but no correlation somehow seems odd.
Polisky

References

Fields & subjects

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