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Wong Hung

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  • All publications (3)
  •  32
    Barber, Michael. The Intentional Spectrum and Intersubjectivity: Phenomenology the Pittsburgh neo-Hegelians. Athens: Ohio University Press, 2011. $69.95 Botz-Bornstein, Thorsten, ed. Inception and Philosophy: Ideas to Die For. Chicago: Open Court, 2011. $19.95 pb. Bouchard, Larry D. Theater and Integrity: Emptying Selves in Drama, Ethics, and Religion. Evanston: North (review)
    with Jason Bridges and Mik Kolodyny
    Philosophy Today. forthcoming.
    20th Century Philosophy
  •  1
    End-of-Life Decision Making in Hong Kong: The Appeal of the Shared Decision Making Model
    with Chun Kit Chui, Julian Chuk-Ling Lai, M. W. Tse Doris, and Ho Mun Chan
    In Ruiping Fan (ed.), Family-Oriented Informed Consent: East Asian and American Perspectives, Springer Verlag. 2015.
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  38
    Evaluating the Pros and Cons of Different Peer Review Policies via Simulation
    with Jia Zhu, Gabriel Fung, Zhixu Li, and Chuanhua Xu
    Science and Engineering Ethics 22 (4): 1073-1094. 2016.
    In the academic world, peer review is one of the major processes in evaluating a scholars contribution. In this study, we are interested in quantifying the merits of different policies in a peer review process, such as single-blind review, double-blind review, and obtaining authors feedback. Currently, insufficient work has been undertaken to evaluate the benefits of different peer review policies. One of the major reasons for this situation is the inability to conduct any empirical study becaus…Read more
    In the academic world, peer review is one of the major processes in evaluating a scholars contribution. In this study, we are interested in quantifying the merits of different policies in a peer review process, such as single-blind review, double-blind review, and obtaining authors feedback. Currently, insufficient work has been undertaken to evaluate the benefits of different peer review policies. One of the major reasons for this situation is the inability to conduct any empirical study because data are presently unavailable. In this case, a computer simulation is one of the best ways to conduct a study. We perform a series of simulations to study the effects of different policies on a peer review process. In this study, we focus on the peer review process of a typical computer science conference. Our results point to the crucial role of program chairs in determining the quality and diversity of the articles to be accepted for publication. We demonstrate the importance of discussion among reviewers, suggest circumstances in which the double-blind review policy should be adopted, and question the credibility of the authors feedback mechanism. Finally, we stress that randomness plays an important role in the peer review process, and this role cannot be eliminated. Although our model may not capture every component of a peer review process, it covers some of the most essential elements. Thus, even the simulation results clearly cannot be taken as literal descriptions of an actual peer review process. However, we can at least still use them to identify alternative directions for future study.
    Technology Ethics
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