Male scientists still more likely to be referenced in papers – but women are catching up

 

American researchers analysed references to previous work written by 5.8 million international authors, 3.8 million men and 2 million women, in scientific research papers from across all subject areas. They found men outnumbered women 3.93 times among authors who started publishing before 1992, but only 1.36 times among authors who started publishing after 2011. 

 

An American analysis of 5.8 million authors across all scientific disciplines shows that the gender gap is closing, but there is still a long distance to go.

The new research by John Ioannidis of the Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford (METRICs) at Stanford University, US, and colleagues, was published this week.

The strong gender gap in science manifests itself in many ways. One of the most prominent ones is the relative representation of men and women among the scientists whose work receive the most attention in the scientific literature.

In the new study, the researchers evaluated the entire Scopus database, a database that includes papers across all scientific fields.

The database included 5.8 million authors who could have their gender identity assigned with high certainty. Of those, 3.8 million were men and 2.0 million were women.

The researchers found that men outnumbered women 3.93 times among those authors who started publishing before 1992, but only 1.36 times among those authors who started publishing after 2011. However, when limited to the authors who had the highest impact (namely, those who were in the top 2% of their discipline based on a citation indicator), men outnumbered women 3.21 times among top-cited authors, decreasing from 6.41 times in the senior groups to 2.28 times in the youngest group who started publishing after 2011.

In the youngest group, 32 of the 174 fields of science (18%) had at least as many women as men, or even more women than men, within the category of top-cited authors.

Gender imbalances in author numbers decreased sharply over time in both high-income countries (including the USA) and other countries, but the latter had little improvement in gender imbalances for top-cited authors.

In random samples of 100 women and 100 men from the youngest group, in-depth assessment showed that most were working in academic environments as of 2023, but promotion to full professor was very rare. The authors argue that both gender imbalances and slow promotion pathways for the most gifted scientists, regardless of gender, need to be improved.

Ioannidis says: “Our work documents substantial shrinkage over time of the inequalities between men and women in the top echelons of scientific citation impact, but there is substantial room for further improvements in most scientific fields.”

Link to research (DOI): 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002385

Source: Scimex 

 

Author: Bob Edlin

Editor of AgScience Magazine and Editor of the AgScience Blog