Do women disagree less in science?

 This paper examines the authorship of post-publication criticisms in the scientific literature, with a focus on gender differences. Bibliometrics from journals in the natural and social sciences show that comments that criticize or correct a published study are 20-40% less likely than regular papers to have a female author. In preprints in the life sciences,
The post Do women disagree less in science? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION. 

This paper examines the authorship of post-publication criticisms in the scientific literature, with a focus on gender differences. Bibliometrics from journals in the natural and social sciences show that comments that criticize or correct a published study are 20-40% less likely than regular papers to have a female author. In preprints in the life sciences, prior to peer review, women are missing by 20-40% in failed replications compared to regular papers, but are not missing in successful replications. In an experiment, I then find large gender differences in willingness to point out and penalize a mistake in someone’s work.

That is from a new paper by David Klinowski.  Via the excellent Kevin Lewis.

The post Do women disagree less in science? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

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Do women disagree less in science?

Do women disagree less in science?

 This paper examines the authorship of post-publication criticisms in the

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