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petersuber
petersuber
@petersuber@fediscience.org  ·  activity timestamp last month

Update. "We conduct a comprehensive comparison between peer-review scores and citation-based metrics across various scientific fields [in Italy]…While both evaluation methods exhibit sex bias, peer review systematically penalizes women more severely than citation-based metrics."
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751157725001245

#Gender #GenderBias #ScholComm

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petersuber
petersuber
@petersuber@fediscience.org replied  ·  activity timestamp last week

Update. A letter to the editor about a study I posted to this thread 11/23/25: "The suggestion that [the lower #retraction rate for women] is because male researchers undergo more scrutiny, propose bolder ideas and lead larger and more dynamic teams than do female researchers implies that male scientists are better at science. As female scientists, our lived experience points to alternative explanations: elevated rigour and scientific integrity by female scientists or more critical peer review of female-led manuscripts."
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00120-y
( #paywalled)

#Gender #GenderBias #ScholComm

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petersuber
petersuber
@petersuber@fediscience.org replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

Update. "By analyzing all articles indexed in the PubMed database (>36.5 million articles published in >36,000 biomedical and life sciences journals), we show that the median amount of time spent under review is 7.4%–14.6% longer for female-authored articles than for male-authored articles."
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003574

#Gender #GenderBias #ScholComm

Biomedical and life science articles by female researchers spend longer under review

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Kate Nyhan
Kate Nyhan
@nyhan@fediscience.org replied  ·  activity timestamp 4 days ago

@petersuber
Hmm, I don't know if I would write this sentence

"By analyzing all articles indexed in the PubMed database (>36.5 million articles published in >36,000 biomedical and life sciences journals), we show that the median amount of time spent under review is 7.4%–14.6% longer for female-authored articles than for male-authored articles, and that differences remain significant after controlling for several factors."

when only 8 millions of the records in PubMed have submitted and accepted dates as part of their metadata

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