论文标题

社交媒体上学术自我提高的性别差距

The Gender Gap in Scholarly Self-Promotion on Social Media

论文作者

Peng, Hao, Teplitskiy, Misha, Romero, Daniel M., Horvát, Emőke-Ágnes

论文摘要

科学中的自我促进性无处不在,但男人和女人可能不会同等地行使科学。对其他领域中自我促进的研究表明,由于自我评估和对不符合性别符合性别的行为的不利反应(````倒退'''''')的研究,女性往往比男性更频繁地自我提高。我们通过350万作者使用约280万的研究论文来检查六年来检查自我促进的作者是否通过检查自我促进来测试该模式是否扩展到学者。总体而言,即使考虑到重要的混淆,女性也比男性自行报纸的可能性要低约28%,并且随着时间的流逝,这一差距也会增加。此外,Twitter的差异采用并不能解释性别差距,即使在相对性别平衡的广泛研究领域,自我评估和推回的偏见也有望较小。此外,差距随着绩效和地位的较高而增加,这对于来自高级期刊上排名最高的机构的有效女性来说最为明显。至关重要的是,我们发现关于性别的差异回报:虽然自我宣传与论文的推文增加有关,但女性的增加而不是男性。我们的发现表明,自我促进因性别而有意义,并有助于解释科学思想可见性中的性别差异。

Self-promotion in science is ubiquitous but may not be exercised equally by men and women. Research on self-promotion in other domains suggests that, due to bias in self-assessment and adverse reactions to non-gender-conforming behaviors (``pushback''), women tend to self-promote less often than men. We test whether this pattern extends to scholars by examining self-promotion over six years using 23M Tweets about 2.8M research papers by 3.5M authors. Overall, women are about 28% less likely than men to self-promote their papers even after accounting for important confounds, and this gap has grown over time. Moreover, differential adoption of Twitter does not explain the gender gap, which is large even in relatively gender-balanced broad research areas, where bias in self-assessment and pushback are expected to be smaller. Further, the gap increases with higher performance and status, being most pronounced for productive women from top-ranked institutions who publish in high-impact journals. Critically, we find differential returns with respect to gender: while self-promotion is associated with increased tweets of papers, the increase is smaller for women than for men. Our findings suggest that self-promotion varies meaningfully by gender and help explain gender differences in the visibility of scientific ideas.

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