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Women are credited less in science than men

Economics

Women are credited less in science than men

M. B. Ross, B. M. Glennon, et al.

This enlightening research conducted by Matthew B. Ross, Britta M. Glennon, Raviv Murciano-Goroff, Enrico G. Berkes, Bruce A. Weinberg, and Julia I. Lane explores how women's contributions in science are frequently overlooked. It reveals troubling trends in authorship attribution that may hinder women's career advancement in high-impact publications.... show more
Abstract
There is a well-documented gap between the observed number of works produced by women and by men in science, with clear consequences for the retention and promotion of women. The gap might be a result of productivity differences, or it might be owing to women's contributions not being acknowledged. Here we find that at least part of this gap is the result of unacknowledged contributions: women in research teams are significantly less likely than men to be credited with authorship. The findings are consistent across three very different sources of data. Analysis of the first source—large-scale administrative data on research teams, team scientific output and attribution of credit—show that women are significantly less likely to be named on a given article or patent produced by their team relative to their male peers. The gender gap in attribution is present across most scientific fields and almost all career stages. The second source—an extensive survey of authors—similarly shows that women's scientific contributions are systematically less likely to be recognized. The third source—qualitative responses—suggests that the reason that women are less likely to be credited is because their work is often not known, is not appreciated or is ignored. At least some of the observed gender gap in scientific output may be owing not to differences in scientific contribution, but rather to differences in attribution.
Publisher
Nature
Published On
Aug 04, 2022
Authors
Matthew B. Ross, Britta M. Glennon, Raviv Murciano-Goroff, Enrico G. Berkes, Bruce A. Weinberg, Julia I. Lane
Tags
gender gap
scientific credit
authorship
women in science
publication bias
career advancement
research teams
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