4.5 Article

Gender gaps in Australian research publishing, citation and co-authorship

Journal

SCIENTOMETRICS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-023-04685-7

Keywords

Gender disparities; Disciplinary differences; Scientific publishing; Field of Research (FoR); Field Citation Ratio (FCR); Co-authorship; Australian science

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Despite improvements, gender inequality still exists in Australian science. To study this issue, researchers analyzed Australian first authored articles published from 2010 to 2020. The analysis showed an increasing ratio of female to male first authored articles, except in information and computing sciences. Females also had a citation advantage in certain fields, such as mathematical sciences and chemical sciences.
Despite improvement in gender inequality in Australian science, the problem has not been fully addressed yet. To better understand the nature of gender inequality in Australian science, all gendered Australian first authored articles published between 2010 and 2020 and indexed in the Dimensions database were analysed. Field of Research (FoR) was used as the subject classification of articles and Field Citation Ratio (FCR) was used for citation comparison. Overall, the ratio of female to male first authored articles increased over the years, and this was true for all FoRs except for information and computing sciences. The ratio of single-authored articles by females was also improved over the study period. Females appeared to have a citation advantage, using Field Citation Ratio, over males in a few FoRs including mathematical sciences, chemical sciences, technology, built environment and design, studies in human society, law and legal studies, and studies in creative arts and writing. The average FCR for female first authored articles was greater than the average FCR for male first authored articles, including in a few fields such mathematical sciences where male authors outperformed females in terms of the number of articles.

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