van der Lee Romy, Ellemers Naomi
Department of Social and Organizational Psychology, Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, 2300 RB Leiden, The Netherlands
Department of Social and Organizational Psychology, Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, 2300 RB Leiden, The Netherlands.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Oct 6;112(40):12349-53. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1510159112. Epub 2015 Sep 21.
We examined the application and review materials of three calls (n=2,823) of a prestigious grant for personal research funding in a national full population of early career scientists awarded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). Results showed evidence of gender bias in application evaluations and success rates, as well as in language use in instructions and evaluation sheets. Male applicants received significantly more competitive "quality of researcher" evaluations (but not "quality of proposal" evaluations) and had significantly higher application success rates than female applicants. Gender disparities were most prevalent in scientific disciplines with the highest number of applications and with equal gender distribution among the applicants (i.e., life sciences and social sciences). Moreover, content analyses of the instructional and evaluation materials revealed the use of gendered language favoring male applicants. Overall, our data reveal a 4% "loss" of women during the grant review procedure, and illustrate the perpetuation of the funding gap, which contributes to the underrepresentation of women in academia.
我们研究了荷兰科学研究组织(NWO)颁发的一项著名个人研究资助金三轮申请(n = 2,823)及评审材料,该资助面向全国所有处于职业生涯早期的科学家。结果显示,在申请评估、成功率以及指南和评估表中的语言使用方面存在性别偏见。男性申请者在“研究人员素质”评估(而非“提案质量”评估)中获得的竞争力显著更高,且申请成功率明显高于女性申请者。在申请数量最多且申请者性别分布均衡的学科(即生命科学和社会科学)中,性别差异最为普遍。此外,对指南和评估材料的内容分析显示,存在偏向男性申请者的性别化语言使用。总体而言,我们的数据显示,在资助评审过程中女性“流失”了4%,并说明了资金差距的持续存在,这导致女性在学术界代表性不足。