The Effect of Gender in the Publication Patterns in Mathematics

Despite the increasing number of women graduating in mathematics, a systemic gender imbalance persists and is signified by a pronounced gender gap in the distribution of active researchers and professors. Especially at the level of university faculty, women mathematicians continue being drastically underrepresented, decades after the first affirmative action measures have been put into place. A solid publication record is of paramount importance for securing permanent positions. Thus, the question arises whether the publication patterns of men and women mathematicians differ in a significant way. Making use of the zbMATH database, one of the most comprehensive metadata sources on mathematical publications, we analyze the scholarly output of ∼150,000 mathematicians from the past four decades whose gender we algorithmically inferred. We focus on development over time, collaboration through coautorships, presumed journal quality and distribution of research topics—factors known to have a strong impact on job perspectives. We report significant differences between genders which may put women at a disadvantage when pursuing an academic career in mathematics.

[1]  Yvonne Benschop,et al.  Gender practices in the construction of academic excellence: Sheep with five legs , 2012 .

[2]  P. Bentley,et al.  Gender differences and factors affecting publication productivity among Australian university academics , 2012 .

[3]  K. Bird,et al.  Do women publish fewer journal articles than men? Sex differences in publication productivity in the social sciences , 2011 .

[4]  Suresh Kumar,et al.  Scientometric profile of Indian scientific output in life sciences with a focus on the contributions of women scientists , 2013, Scientometrics.

[5]  B. Martin,et al.  Special issue: emerging challenges for science, technology and innovation policy research: a reflexive overview , 2009 .

[6]  Adriana Valente,et al.  Scientific and Technological Performance by Gender , 2004 .

[7]  V. Hesli,et al.  Faculty Research Productivity: Why Do Some of Our Colleagues Publish More than Others? , 2011, PS: Political Science & Politics.

[8]  Carl T. Bergstrom,et al.  The Role of Gender in Scholarly Authorship , 2012, PloS one.

[9]  Vincent Larivière,et al.  Forty years of gender disparities in Russian science: a historical bibliometric analysis , 2015, Scientometrics.

[10]  Stephen M. Watt,et al.  Joint Proceedings of the MathUI, OpenMath and ThEdu Workshops and Work in Progress track at CICM co-located with Conferences on Intelligent Computer Mathematics (CICM 2014), Coimbra, Portugal, July 7-11, 2014 , 2014, CICM Workshops.

[11]  Clément Bosquet,et al.  Are academics who publish more also more cited? Individual determinants of publication and citation records , 2013, Scientometrics.

[12]  Helena Mihaljević-Brandt,et al.  Assignment of binary gender to mathematics authors in zbMATH , 2016 .

[13]  Hariolf Grupp,et al.  Gender-specific patterns in patenting and publishing , 2009 .

[14]  Cassidy R. Sugimoto,et al.  Bibliometrics: Global gender disparities in science , 2013, Nature.

[15]  Monica Gaughan,et al.  How do men and women differ in research collaborations? An analysis of the collaborative motives and strategies of academic researchers☆ , 2011 .

[16]  Isabel Gómez,et al.  Assessing gender balance among journal authors and editorial board members , 2012, Scientometrics.

[17]  María Bordons,et al.  Authors and Editors in Mathematics Journals: a gender perspective , 2012 .

[18]  Fabian Müller,et al.  Author Profile Pages in zbMATH - Improving Accuracy through User Interaction , 2014, CICM Workshops.

[19]  David Lutzer,et al.  Statistical Abstract of Undergraduate Programs in the Mathematical Sciences in the United States , 2002 .

[20]  Lincoln Mullen,et al.  Predict Gender from Names Using Historical Data , 2015 .

[21]  Stuart Dillon,et al.  Authorship patterns in information systems , 1997, Scientometrics.

[22]  Marcos André Gonçalves,et al.  A brief survey of automatic methods for author name disambiguation , 2012, SGMD.

[23]  Chaomei Chen,et al.  How are collaboration and productivity correlated at various career stages of scientists? , 2014, Scientometrics.

[24]  Tobias Kiesslich,et al.  Reasons for Journal Impact Factor Changes: Influence of Changing Source Items , 2016, PloS one.