Wang X, Dworkin J D, Zhou D, Stiso J, Falk E B, Bassett D S, Zurn P, Lydon-Staley D M
Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY.
Ann Int Commun Assoc. 2021;45(2):134-153. doi: 10.1080/23808985.2021.1960180. Epub 2021 Jul 30.
In disciplines outside of communication, papers with women as first and last (i.e., senior) authors attract fewer citations than papers with men in those positions. Using data from 14 communication journals from 1995 to 2018, we find that reference lists include more papers with men as first and last author, and fewer papers with women as first and last author, than would be expected if gender were unrelated to referencing. This imbalance is driven largely by the citation practices of men and is slowly decreasing over time. The structure of men's co-authorship networks partly accounts for the observed over-citation of men by other men. We discuss ways researchers might approach gendered citations in their work.
在传播学之外的学科中,以女性作为第一作者和最后(即资深)作者的论文比以男性担任这些职位的论文获得的引用更少。利用1995年至2018年14种传播学期刊的数据,我们发现参考文献列表中以男性作为第一作者和最后作者的论文比预期的更多,而以女性作为第一作者和最后作者的论文比预期的更少,前提是如果性别与参考文献引用无关的话。这种不平衡在很大程度上是由男性的引用习惯造成的,并且随着时间的推移正在缓慢减少。男性共同作者网络的结构部分解释了观察到的男性被其他男性过度引用的现象。我们讨论了研究人员在工作中处理性别化引用的方法。