INVESTIGADORES
D'ALMEIDA Romina Elisa
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Over-contribution of women in top-ranked journal publications reveals a new type of gender bias
Autor/es:
GABRIELA FONTANARROSA; LUCIA ZARBA; VALERIA ASCHERO; DOS SANTOS, DANIEL ANDRÉS; NUÑEZ MONTELLANO, MARÍA GABRIELA; LOMÁSCOLO, SILVA BEATRIZ; NOVILLO, AGUSTINA; FRATANI, JESSICA; PLAZA BEHR, MAIA; ALVAREZ, MARISA; CASASGRANDA, ELVIRA; CHIAPPERO, FERNANDA; CHILLO, VERONICA; COCIMANO, ALEJANDRA; D´HIRIART, SOFIA; D'ALMEIDA ROMINA ELISA; FANJUL, ELISA; FASOLA, LAURA; FERNANDEZ, ROMINA; GALLEGOS SÁNCHEZ, SILVANA; LORENZO PISARELLO, MARÍA JOSÉ; MARTINEZ GALVEZ, FERNANDA; MOLINERI, CARLOS; MONMANY GARZIA, CAROLINA; NANNI, SOFIA; OVEJERO, RAMIRO; PERO, EDGARDO; RODRÍGUEZ, DANIELA; RUSSO, CANDELA; SANDOVAL-SAINAS, MARIA; SCHROEDER, NATALIA; VALOY, MARIANA; REYNAGA, MARIA CELINA;; RAMIREZ MEJÍA, ANDRÉS; PIQUER-RODRIGUEZ, MARÍA
Lugar:
Gandía, Valencia - Spain
Reunión:
Conferencia; Bridges: BRIDGES BETWEEN DISCIPLINES: GENDER IN STEM AND SOCIAL SCIENCES- 2022; 2022
Institución organizadora:
S De Esteban, AR Gomez-Cano, J Marigó, full list https://bridges2022.com/about-us/#convenors
Resumen:
There is a generalized strong belief by which Academia is considered a meritocracy: a system of career advancement depending exclusively on individual talent and effort. Nevertheless, countless studies have documented differential barriers for women in science affecting productivity, impact, and career length. Specifically, Ecology is one of the disciplines with major competition for tenured positions across STEM disciplines. Mining into the structure of scientific co-authorship publications, in this contribution we developed a women´s contribution index pondering the gender-based individual contribution (ie., merit within a paper) using the allocation in co-authorship rank. We surveyed articles of the Top ranked journal Ecology from 1999 to 2021. We compared the measured women´s contribution index vs what was expected in a non-gender biased scenario. We found that overall, women account for 30% of authors, yet their contribution is higher than expected by chance (i.e., over-contribution). Moreover, in multi-authored papers, the probability of not having a female co-author is higher than not having a male co-author. We observed an extreme gender-segregated pattern, with fewer female co-authors in men-led papers. We discuss the underlying process behind the observed female over-contribution pattern in terms of gender biased drop-out rates and its counterpart, over-compensation. This implies dealing with open or implicit biases pointing at the few women publishing in Ecology not only achieving the merits accomplished by their male peers, but have also surpassed them.