Martin Chris C, Lockley Andrew, Hendricks Steve, Clark Cory J, Mundra Ishita, Matzner Nils
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332.
Independent Scholar, London WC1H 0QB, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Jul;122(26):e2506023122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2506023122. Epub 2025 Jun 23.
Scholars have long been concerned about gender representation in scientific research but there has been little work on gender differences in participation and performance in climate science, a field that engages with both male-majority disciplines (e.g., geosciences, engineering) and female-majority disciplines (e.g., life sciences, medical science). This has implications for both gender equity and viewpoint representation. Sampling over 400,000 publications and a similar number of authors, we examine gender differences in several scholarly outcomes including publication count, career survival, coauthor gender, journal status, and mean citation count. We find men and women are similarly productive, successful, and connected, though women have shorter research careers and thus fewer papers. We also find gender homophily effects in collaboration, but no evidence of gender bias in peer review.
长期以来,学者们一直关注科学研究中的性别代表性问题,但对于气候科学领域中参与度和表现方面的性别差异研究甚少,该领域涉及男性主导的学科(如地球科学、工程学)和女性主导的学科(如生命科学、医学)。这对性别平等和观点代表性都有影响。我们对40多万篇出版物和数量相近的作者进行抽样,研究了几个学术成果方面的性别差异,包括论文发表数量、职业存续、合著者性别、期刊地位和平均被引次数。我们发现,男性和女性在产出、成就和社交方面表现相似,尽管女性的研究职业生涯较短,因此发表的论文较少。我们还发现合作中存在性别同质化效应,但没有证据表明同行评审中存在性别偏见。