Is science built on the shoulders of women? : a study of gender differences in contributorship
Article [Accepted Manuscript]
Is part of
Academic medicine ; Academic medicine ; vol. 91. vol. 91. no. 8. no. 8.p. 1136.p. 1136.1142. 1142.Publisher(s)
Lippincott, Williams & WilkinsAbstract(s)
Purpose: Women remain underrepresented in the production of scientific literature and
relatively little is known regarding the labor roles played by women in the production of
knowledge. This research examines these labor roles, using contributorship data from science
and medical journals published by the Public Library of Science (PLOS). PLOS journals require
each author to indicate their contribution to one or more of the following tasks: (1) Analyzed the
data; (2) Conceived and designed the experiments; (3) Contributes reagents/materials/analysis
tools; (4) Performed the experiments; and (5) Wrote the paper.
Method: We analyzed contribution data from more than 85,000 articles published between 2008
and 2013 in PLOS journals with respect to gender using both descriptive and regression
analyses.
Results: Gender is a significant variable in determining the likelihood of performing a certain
task associated with authorship. Women are significantly more likely to be associated with
performing experiments and men are more likely to be associated with all other authorship roles.
This holds true controlling for age: although experimentation is associated with academically
younger scholars, the gap between male and female contribution to this task remains constant
across academic age. Inequalities are observed in the distribution of scientific labor roles.
Conclusions: These disparities have implications for the production of science, the evaluation of
scholars, and the ethical conduct of science. Adopting the practice of identifying contributorship
rather than authorship in scientific journal will allow for greater transparency, accountability, and
equitable allocation of resources in science.
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