Google scholar seems to know about the online pre-prints that are
available. I have been using it without e.g. logging into the ACM
digital library, so it will list as free to me the papers that anyone
can see without paying.

This is a bit different from asking for a copy of a paper for my own
use. I need permission to put it on a public web site. If an author is
permitted to put the paper on a public web site they usually do so on
their university and/or personal web sites. I have checked those for
some of the papers I would like to use, and only found the journal
reference.

Do keep the ideas coming, especially if you know something that works
for social science but not computer science. I have done a lot of
academic literature searches but only in computer science.

I think the papers we have found will be enough to make the key point
that names can affect bias.

On 5/22/2019 9:17 AM, Matt Sicker wrote:
You might be able to email the researchers directly. In my experience,
almost all researchers are willing to send you free copies of their
research because they're more interested in sharing the knowledge than
a journal's desire for money. They also typically have some sort of
pre-print version of the paper which is essentially the same as the
published one but formatted differently (and free!). Most researchers
in computer science and mathematics seem to publish pre-print papers
to arxiv.org for example.

On Wed, 22 May 2019 at 11:13, Naomi Slater <[email protected]> wrote:

sounds great!!!

On Wed, 22 May 2019 at 17:09, Patricia Shanahan <[email protected]> wrote:


The next paragraph after the one about e-mail names and dates is going
to be about the fact that English has many variations in dialect and
style. Style, such as how directly one will tell someone else they are
wrong, tends to vary with both gender and culture.

I picked names as the initial point only because I knew there were
studies on that particular issue, and I want to convince people who
start out believing there cannot be any race, gender, ethnicity etc.
bias in e-mail-only groups.


On 5/22/2019 7:19 AM, Justin Mclean wrote:
Hi,

It’s not just dates that give you away :-) People often in email list
use terms, while possible known, often have a very different meanings
outside of the US. A large number of US corporate, sporting or gambling
idioms, would be lost on most people outside the US and possibly be a
trigger for subconscious bias, Well I assume I don’t know any studies on
this or knowledgeable in this area. A recent example (used on this list)
would be “socialize”.

Thanks,
Justin
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