Do females create higher impact research? Scopus citations and Mendeley readers for articles from five countries

08/09/2018
by   Mike Thelwall, et al.
0

There are known gender imbalances in participation in scientific fields, from female dominance of nursing to male dominance of mathematics. It is not clear whether there is also a citation imbalance, with some claiming that male-authored research tends to be more cited. No previous study has assessed gender differences in the readers of academic research on a large scale, however. In response, this article assesses whether there are gender differences in the average citations and/or Mendeley readers of academic publications. Field normalised logged Scopus citations and Mendeley readers from mid-2018 for articles published in 2014 were investigated for articles with first authors from India, Spain, Turkey, the UK and the USA in up to 251 fields with at least 50 male and female authors. Although female-authored research is less cited in Turkey (-4.0 more cited in Spain (0.4 research has fewer Mendeley readers in India (-1.1 Turkey (1.1 little practical gender difference in citation impact in countries with mature science systems, the higher female readership impact suggests a wider audience for female-authored research. The results show that the conclusions from a gender analysis depend on the field normalisation method. A theoretically informed decision must therefore be made about which normalisation to use. The results also suggest that arithmetic mean-based field normalisation is favourable to males.

READ FULL TEXT

page 7

page 8

page 9

page 10

research
04/29/2019

Female citation impact superiority 1996-2018 in six out of seven English-speaking nations

Efforts to combat continuing gender inequalities in academia need to be ...
research
08/22/2021

Assessing Gender Bias in the Information Systems Field: An Analysis of the Impact on Citations

Gender bias, a systemic and unfair difference in how men and women are t...
research
08/01/2023

Who benefits from altmetrics? The effect of team gender composition on the link between online visibility and citation impact

Online science dissemination has quickly become crucial in promoting sch...
research
04/05/2021

Citations and gender diversity in reciprocal acknowledgement networks

Acknowledgements in scientific articles suggest not only gratitude, but ...
research
03/02/2021

Convergence and Inequality in Research Globalization

The catch-up effect and the Matthew effect offer opposing characterizati...
research
02/15/2023

Quantifying gender imbalance in East Asian academia

Gender imbalance in academia has been confirmed in terms of a variety of...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset