Physics
has one of the largest gender gaps in science, technology, engineering,
mathematics and medicine (STEMM) according to an analysis of more than 36
million authors of academic papers over the last two decades (PLoS Biol 16(4)
e2004956). The study,
carried out by researchers at the University of Melbourne in Australia, says
that at current rates it will be more than two centuries until there are equal
numbers of senior male and female researchers in physics.
While
the proportion of women in most STEMM fields is increasing, Luke Holman and his colleagues used computational methods to estimate the speed of
change. They did this by estimating the gender of 36.6 million authors on 9.7
million papers the databases PubMed and arXiv. In the latter, for example, the researchers say they were able to
estimate – with 95% confidence – the gender of 1.18 million authors from
538,688 preprint published since 1991.
If we
want to see 50% of physicists being women sooner we need to implement new
initiatives to do this – over and above any currently-running initiatives
Of the
115 scientific disciplines examined, 87, including physics, had fewer than 45%
female authors. Around 13% of last authors in physics were women – a figure
that is currently increasing at a rate of just 0.1% per year. The researchers
say that as last author is usually associated with seniority, based on this
data, their model predicts that it will be 258 years before the gender ratio of
senior physicists comes within 5% of parity. “It’s almost the most male-biased
STEMM discipline that we have data for,” Holman told
The
researchers also highlight computer science, maths and surgery as field with
gender gaps that are likely to persist for generations. They conclude that
further reforms in education, mentoring and academic publishing, beyond current
initiatives, will be needed to close the STEMM gender gap. “If we want to see
50% of physicists being women sooner we need to implement new initiatives to do
this – over and above any currently-running initiatives,” adds Holman.
The
authors acknowledge, however, that the lack of a consistent style for authors’
names in arXiv, with many only providing initials, could have affected
the quality of the analysis. Patricia Rankin,
chair of the American Physical Society’s committee on the status of women in
physics, also cautioned against assuming that the last author on a paper is the
most senior. “The meaning of paper order can vary from field to field, in
high-energy physics, for example, its often just alphabetical,” she says. “The
258 years to parity also assumes no change in the current conditions but I
think we are getting much more focused on understanding why the participation
of women in physics is low – and in designing evidence-based interventions.”
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