… which is of course a bit of a polemic title, let me try to motivate:
- I do not understand how acceptance ratio can serve as quality measure.
- Low acceptance ratios waste community resources and suggest exclusivity based attitudes towards quality.
- See this post on numerical evaluation criteria, including h-index.
How can acceptance ratio serve as measure of quality of a conference
Acceptance ratio, i.e., the fraction of total number of submitted papers over the number of accepted papers, is considered as important quality indicator of a conference.
I do not understand (as in I do not have the knowledge) how or why and believe there is a number of issues:
- It is very easy to manipulate: e.g. submit arbitrary number of random papers, who actually checks that the numbers given are true?
- It is a relative measure, it
- does not say of how high a quality a paper is
- but only how many other papers were kept out
- based on an “us vs. them” understanding of community
- It is based on influences outside the control of authors, varying over time
- e.g., how many papers were submitted, possibly on certain topics, in a year
- the same paper would be accepted at different acceptance ratios, in e.g. different years of the same conference
- It may force rejection of strong papers
- “so we have received papers from Einstein, Higgs, Planck, Bor, etc, but we can accept only 10%, who do we reject?”
- “Clearly this paper will solve the climate crisis and can bring world peace – but if I accept more than 10% I or the conference look bad”
Acceptance ratio is first a function of which and how many papers were submitted in given year, based on how many papers were kept out. What does this say about quality of papers, I do not see how it can be used to compare or evaluate.
Focusing on acceptance ratio hurts the community
Apart from not being the meaningful quality measure it is often used, I believe it is even bad for the community. As stated above, it is a measure of many papers were kept out (in a given year, depending on other papers etc)
- community understanding
- it hurts the community and ultimately society by possibly rejecting very good work or delaying its publication
- it does not evaluate quality by itself, but is based on a notion of how many papers were left out
- it suggests a community of “us”, we who know the game and take decisions, vs. “them” those we keep out
- it provides an incentive to increase the gap between “us” and “them”, as rejecting many papers. “them”, increases the perceived quality of accepted papers (low acceptance ratio), “us”
- those who define the rules profit from high rejection numbers
- it suggests a community based on exclusivity, serves those inside rather than the whole community
- community resources
- writing papers, submitting, reviewing, evaluation etc requires substantial resources from those involved, authors, reviewers, technical program committee, etc, i.e., the community
- a low acceptance ratio means, put a bit polemically, that the conference managed to lure many authors to submitting papers, which will not get accepted, wasting substantial community resources in the process
- “you all work hard, mostly in vain, so the conference can look good”
- junior researchers and TPC member are disproportionately affected
- acceptance ratio one
- would mean
- no efforts wasting on rejected papers
- community resources only used where they bring benefit to the community
- inclusiveness as basis for community, “us” could become the entire community
- would mean
Acceptance Ratio One is practically not possible, but I believe it can serve as guideline for different quality measures and community attitude.
A fictional story
… illustrating some of the points.
Three seasoned TPC chairs of conferences discuss in a panel, comparing the quality of their conferences:
- A: “We accepted all papers we found to be of good quality.”
- B: “Nice and commendable, but what was your acceptance ratio?”
- A: “50 %”
- audience gasps, B and C shake their heads “that cannot be a good conference”
- B: “We never had higher acceptance ratio than 10%.”
- audience looks impressed
- C smiles condescendingly: “Decent conference, but you might still have accepted too many papers. Only our conference can claim to be perfect pillar of quality, never having accepted too many papers: we never accepted a single paper, we are the best conference based on acceptance ratio!”
- gasps and admiration, TPC chair, scattered audience members: “but….”