IRIMDLMay 18

Traditional statistical representations outperform generative AI in identifying expert peer reviewers

arXiv:2605.187520.0
Predicted impact top 96% in IR · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

For scientific institutions automating reviewer selection, this work shows that simple statistical methods are more reliable than LLMs, challenging the assumption that generative AI is superior for specialized tasks.

The paper benchmarks statistical and AI-driven methods for identifying expert peer reviewers, finding that traditional TF-IDF outperforms GPT-4o mini (79.5% vs 51.5% top-25 accuracy).

The exponential growth of scientific submissions has strained the peer review system. Despite the rapidly expanding global pool of researchers, this unprecedented scale has rendered the previous approach of manual expert identification unfeasible. Therefore, institutions have naturally turned to Large Language Models (LLMs) to automate intricate processes like expert reviewer identification. However, the reliability of these new models in accurately identifying domain experts lacks rigorous evaluation. We conduct a comprehensive empirical evaluation of statistical and AI-driven expertise identification methodologies to benchmark their reliability and limitations. Framing expert identification as an information retrieval problem, we utilize the distributed peer review system of a major international astronomical observatory, where proposal authorship serves as our proxy ground truth for domain expertise. Evaluating six retrieval methodologies utilized across observatories and computer science conferences, we demonstrate that traditional statistical representations outperform generative AI. Specifically, Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency successfully identified a labeled expert within the top 25 recommendations 79.5% of the time, compared to 51.5% for GPT-4o mini. Our results highlight that distinguishing subfield expertise requires fine-grained vocabulary, which is obscured by the semantic smoothing in generative methods. By establishing a rigorous evaluation framework for automated peer review, we demonstrate that transparent and reproducible statistical representations still outperform computationally expensive LLMs in specialized scientific tasks.

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