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  3. Reviewers in two groups were given identical resumes for Emily Clarke and James Clarke and told they had used AI.

Reviewers in two groups were given identical resumes for Emily Clarke and James Clarke and told they had used AI.

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  • rycaut@mastodon.socialR rycaut@mastodon.social

    @amydiehl @mhoye I seriously wonder how people read resumes where the name is ambiguous.

    (Eh very personal interest here - I’ve been misgendered based on my name nearly daily since I was a teenager. I’m a very cis male but daily get people asking if I’m using my wife’s card or being startled when I pick up for Shannon etc. I’ve long wondered if my resume gets penalized by bias like this study shows)

    timo21@mastodon.sdf.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
    timo21@mastodon.sdf.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
    timo21@mastodon.sdf.org
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #11

    @Rycaut @amydiehl @mhoye That might be. I knew a white guy who used his full first name, Jerome, not Jerry or whatever. He said he was always being put in the POC box because of his first name. It didn't bother him, because he was a great guy, but he knew when it was happening.

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    • rycaut@mastodon.socialR rycaut@mastodon.social

      @amydiehl @mhoye I seriously wonder how people read resumes where the name is ambiguous.

      (Eh very personal interest here - I’ve been misgendered based on my name nearly daily since I was a teenager. I’m a very cis male but daily get people asking if I’m using my wife’s card or being startled when I pick up for Shannon etc. I’ve long wondered if my resume gets penalized by bias like this study shows)

      hypostase@bsd.networkH This user is from outside of this forum
      hypostase@bsd.networkH This user is from outside of this forum
      hypostase@bsd.network
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #12

      @Rycaut
      Yes. Yes it does. I'm only a sample of one, and the rest I've seen is anecdotal, but I've had very different responses to first name v initials only.
      Not every time, but enough. And not a few mildly disappointed oh we thought you were a bloke comments when I've used this name.
      @amydiehl @mhoye

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      • amydiehl@mstdn.socialA amydiehl@mstdn.social

        Reviewers in two groups were given identical resumes for Emily Clarke and James Clarke and told they had used AI. Emily's was 2x as likely to raise doubts about competence. "She can't even write a CV herself." But James "just needed a bit of help."
        https://fortune.com/2026/05/10/identical-resume-ai-men-women-response-trust-ability/

        donchacale@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
        donchacale@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
        donchacale@mastodon.social
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #13

        @amydiehl
        jesus fucking christ.. still!

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        • locha@fediscience.orgL locha@fediscience.org

          @amydiehl There’s a paywall. Would you share the link to the scientific paper?

          skua@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
          skua@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
          skua@mastodon.social
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #14

          @locha @amydiehl

          Not becoming clear that there is a journal article after searches.

          May be very much "a study by Zehra Chatoo".

          Zehra Chatoo; "most recently in leadership roles at Meta, culminated in the founding of Code For Good Now, a values-led consultancy helping brands and agencies grow responsibly in the age of AI."

          I don't doubt accuracy of the study.

          I have got concerns about the specific values embodied and promoted by former Meta-leaders and brand builders.

          #ZehraChatoo #AISlop

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          • amydiehl@mstdn.socialA amydiehl@mstdn.social

            Reviewers in two groups were given identical resumes for Emily Clarke and James Clarke and told they had used AI. Emily's was 2x as likely to raise doubts about competence. "She can't even write a CV herself." But James "just needed a bit of help."
            https://fortune.com/2026/05/10/identical-resume-ai-men-women-response-trust-ability/

            wobweger@mstdn.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
            wobweger@mstdn.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
            wobweger@mstdn.social
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #15

            @amydiehl 🤨

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            • oberstenzian@mastodon.socialO oberstenzian@mastodon.social

              @amydiehl Now let’s try the same experiment again but with a twist:

              *POC who aren’t South East Asian of any gender versus white male*

              Pretty sure I could guess the results fairly accurately…

              me_valentijn@m.ai6yr.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
              me_valentijn@m.ai6yr.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
              me_valentijn@m.ai6yr.org
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #16

              @oberstenzian @amydiehl
              Researchers do that one periodically in the Netherlands. Results: employers are massively racist, and the politicians never care.

              Then the anti-intersectionality White marginalized groups loudly complain about how they are treated and wonder how society ever decided it was okay to discriminate against themselves, while the politicians agree that it is indeed outrageous and unacceptable 😑

              And nothing changes.

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              • amydiehl@mstdn.socialA amydiehl@mstdn.social

                Reviewers in two groups were given identical resumes for Emily Clarke and James Clarke and told they had used AI. Emily's was 2x as likely to raise doubts about competence. "She can't even write a CV herself." But James "just needed a bit of help."
                https://fortune.com/2026/05/10/identical-resume-ai-men-women-response-trust-ability/

                faithfulljohn@mastodon.scotF This user is from outside of this forum
                faithfulljohn@mastodon.scotF This user is from outside of this forum
                faithfulljohn@mastodon.scot
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #17

                @amydiehl 🤮🤬😭

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                • undead@masto.hackers.townU undead@masto.hackers.town

                  @amydiehl

                  This is why I always insisted that whoever received the resumes in HR replace the names with a serial number before passing it on to another HR person to review. I could only do this for my ops team, but it made a hugely positive difference in the quality of candidates we ended up with.

                  joy_intl@mastodon.onlineJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  joy_intl@mastodon.onlineJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  joy_intl@mastodon.online
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #18

                  @undead on behalf of all people who actually want a more equitable world, thank you.

                  No one has any reason _not_ to remove identifying info like name/address from resumés/CVs (oh, and pictures!) and I don't understand why it's not a requirement.

                  @amydiehl

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                  • dpontifex@infosec.exchangeD dpontifex@infosec.exchange

                    @amydiehl @mhoye

                    “… women were consistently more skeptical than men that AI benefits would outweigh its risks, and were less convinced that their professional lives would gain because of the technology.”

                    Could this be because they can recognize it as mansplaining as a service?

                    ginevracat@toot.communityG This user is from outside of this forum
                    ginevracat@toot.communityG This user is from outside of this forum
                    ginevracat@toot.community
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #19

                    @dpontifex @ShaulaEvans @amydiehl @mhoye 100%

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                    • undead@masto.hackers.townU undead@masto.hackers.town

                      @amydiehl

                      This is why I always insisted that whoever received the resumes in HR replace the names with a serial number before passing it on to another HR person to review. I could only do this for my ops team, but it made a hugely positive difference in the quality of candidates we ended up with.

                      edwintorok@discuss.systemsE This user is from outside of this forum
                      edwintorok@discuss.systemsE This user is from outside of this forum
                      edwintorok@discuss.systems
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #20

                      @undead @amydiehl how do you deal with projects mentioned on the CV if the name is removed? If an unfamiliar project is mentioned you may want to look it up, and then it'd be useful to know whether they were one of the main contributors (probably only relevant for people who have open source contributions on their CV).

                      Perhaps this could be anonymized to some degree without revealing the identity (classify into: top contributor, regular contributor, occasional contributor, never contributed) which could be cross-checked against the claims on the CV. But I think a human still needs to make that judgement, evaluating contributions is not always straightforward (e.g. someone could've contributed a lot of bugreports, or wikipages, or conference talks, or could've used slightly different usernames/name spellings/etc). Also you'd need to evaluate whether those contributions are relevant for the position they apply for.

                      Papers cited on a CV are also difficult to anonymize, they usually have a small number of authors, and together with other information on the CV it may be obvious who it is.

                      Or do you restore the serial number back to a name for the technical evaluation/interview?

                      viq@social.hackerspace.plV 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • amydiehl@mstdn.socialA amydiehl@mstdn.social

                        Reviewers in two groups were given identical resumes for Emily Clarke and James Clarke and told they had used AI. Emily's was 2x as likely to raise doubts about competence. "She can't even write a CV herself." But James "just needed a bit of help."
                        https://fortune.com/2026/05/10/identical-resume-ai-men-women-response-trust-ability/

                        varpie@peculiar.floristV This user is from outside of this forum
                        varpie@peculiar.floristV This user is from outside of this forum
                        varpie@peculiar.florist
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #21

                        @amydiehl Some say AI tooling is a multiplicator. Here it's just the same: the people showing doubts toward the feminine persona are just using it as an excuse to justify their inherent sexism...
                        I'd be curious to see more details about the study though: who are the reviewers? How big are the sets of people they have to review? How does the use of AI affect their overall judgement, compared to their gender specific acceptance rate? I just don't understand where this 22% number comes from, but my guess is the use of AI isn't a significant factor here when correlated to gender.

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                        • edwintorok@discuss.systemsE edwintorok@discuss.systems

                          @undead @amydiehl how do you deal with projects mentioned on the CV if the name is removed? If an unfamiliar project is mentioned you may want to look it up, and then it'd be useful to know whether they were one of the main contributors (probably only relevant for people who have open source contributions on their CV).

                          Perhaps this could be anonymized to some degree without revealing the identity (classify into: top contributor, regular contributor, occasional contributor, never contributed) which could be cross-checked against the claims on the CV. But I think a human still needs to make that judgement, evaluating contributions is not always straightforward (e.g. someone could've contributed a lot of bugreports, or wikipages, or conference talks, or could've used slightly different usernames/name spellings/etc). Also you'd need to evaluate whether those contributions are relevant for the position they apply for.

                          Papers cited on a CV are also difficult to anonymize, they usually have a small number of authors, and together with other information on the CV it may be obvious who it is.

                          Or do you restore the serial number back to a name for the technical evaluation/interview?

                          viq@social.hackerspace.plV This user is from outside of this forum
                          viq@social.hackerspace.plV This user is from outside of this forum
                          viq@social.hackerspace.pl
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #22

                          @edwintorok @undead @amydiehl during interview it's pretty obvious whether you're talking with an overweight white guy in his 60s or a rare talking cat.
                          The point is to give them and more the same chance of getting to be interviewed. And I assume the specifics of their contributions will be discussed during interview.

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                          • amydiehl@mstdn.socialA amydiehl@mstdn.social

                            Reviewers in two groups were given identical resumes for Emily Clarke and James Clarke and told they had used AI. Emily's was 2x as likely to raise doubts about competence. "She can't even write a CV herself." But James "just needed a bit of help."
                            https://fortune.com/2026/05/10/identical-resume-ai-men-women-response-trust-ability/

                            rysiek@mstdn.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                            rysiek@mstdn.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                            rysiek@mstdn.social
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #23

                            @amydiehl thank you for sharing. It's a stark reminder how much sexism there exists in the workplace.

                            I wonder if the fact that the CVs were generated and reviewers knew about this made any difference.

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                            • amydiehl@mstdn.socialA amydiehl@mstdn.social

                              Reviewers in two groups were given identical resumes for Emily Clarke and James Clarke and told they had used AI. Emily's was 2x as likely to raise doubts about competence. "She can't even write a CV herself." But James "just needed a bit of help."
                              https://fortune.com/2026/05/10/identical-resume-ai-men-women-response-trust-ability/

                              dresstokilt@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                              dresstokilt@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                              dresstokilt@mastodon.social
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #24

                              @amydiehl what exactly is being tested here? That two identical resumes are perceived diffently based on the assumed gender of the name at the top?

                              If so, *why did AI* need to get involved?*

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                              • jwcph@helvede.netJ jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic
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