Preferences for, and Familiarity With, Blinding Among HR Practitioners

Sean Fath, S. Zhu
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

“Blinding” — purposefully limiting the information incorporated into an evaluation to reduce the risk of bias — is a policy solution employed in various domains to increase the fairness and accuracy of evaluations. However, at many important organizational junctures, such as hiring decisions, promotion assessments, and performance reviews, blinding policies are relatively rare. For example, hiring managers generally have broad, rather than constrained, autonomy in selecting the information that is incorporated into hiring decisions. Consequentially, hiring decisions are susceptible to bias via non-credential information gathered through unstructured interview procedures or internet searches. The goals of the present research were twofold. First, using a sample of HR practitioners with extensive hiring experience, we explored preferences for self-blinding — a personal choice to avoid receiving potentially biasing information about a target of evaluation — in a mock hiring task. Second, we gauged practitioners’ professional experience and familiarity with blinding policies in organizational settings.
人力资源从业者对盲法的偏好和熟悉程度
“盲法”——有目的地限制纳入评估的信息,以减少偏见的风险——是在各个领域采用的一种政策解决方案,以提高评估的公平性和准确性。然而,在许多重要的组织节点,如招聘决策、晋升评估和绩效评估,盲目政策是相对罕见的。例如,招聘经理通常在选择纳入招聘决策的信息方面拥有广泛的自主权,而不是有限的自主权。因此,招聘决策很容易受到偏见的影响,这些偏见来自于通过非结构化面试程序或互联网搜索收集到的非凭证信息。本研究的目的是双重的。首先,我们以具有丰富招聘经验的人力资源从业人员为样本,探讨了在模拟招聘任务中自我盲的偏好——一种个人选择,以避免收到有关评估目标的潜在偏见信息。其次,我们衡量了从业人员的专业经验和对组织设置中致盲政策的熟悉程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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