Female authorship in global research: a bibliometric study of high- and low-income country collaborations.

IF 3.3 2区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Francesca Totis, Filippo Emanuele Colella, Adrian Safa, Roberto Stefini, Delia Cannizzaro
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to examine female authorship in research from collaborations between high-income countries (HICs) and lower-middle-income and low-income countries (LMICs/LICs) across two time periods: 2018-2020 and 2021-2023.

Methods: A bibliometric analysis of neurosurgical research articles from the Scopus database, published between 2018 and 2023, was performed to investigate collaboration trends between HICs and LMICs/LICs. Only neurosurgical publications were included, and female authors were identified based on names traditionally associated with female gender identity, verified through online searches and tools such as Genderize.io. Articles with more than 25 authors, commentaries, letters, and news items were excluded to ensure a focus on original research. The selected articles spanned various neurosurgical specialties and were restricted to English-language journals with an impact factor greater than 1. The country affiliations of first, corresponding, and last authors were categorized using the 2018 World Bank classification to understand collaboration patterns across income levels.

Results: The analysis revealed a steady increase in neurosurgical publications from 2018 to 2023, with a notable rise in the second triennium (2021-2023). Authors from HICs consistently held the majority of first, corresponding, and last authorship positions. Concerning first authorship, authors with affiliations from HICs increased from 66% in the first triennium to 75% in the second. Similarly, corresponding authors from HICs increased from 75% to 82% over the same period. Male authors dominated all key authorship roles, with 127 male-led first authorships compared with 46 female-led first authorships in the second triennium. This male predominance persisted in corresponding and last author roles as well.

Conclusions: Global neurosurgical research is growing but significant gender disparities persist, especially in LMICs/LICs, with female researchers underrepresented in key authorship roles, requiring targeted efforts to address systemic barriers and promote gender equity in academic leadership.

全球研究中的女性作者:高收入和低收入国家合作的文献计量学研究。
目的:本研究的目的是在2018-2020年和2021-2023年两个时间段内,检查高收入国家(HICs)与中低收入国家(LMICs/LICs)合作研究中的女性作者。方法:对Scopus数据库中2018年至2023年发表的神经外科研究文章进行文献计量分析,探讨高收入国家与低收入国家/低收入国家之间的合作趋势。仅包括神经外科出版物,女性作者的身份是根据传统上与女性性别认同相关的名字确定的,并通过在线搜索和Genderize.io等工具进行验证。超过25位作者的文章、评论、信件和新闻被排除在外,以确保对原创性研究的关注。入选的文章涵盖了不同的神经外科专业,并且仅限于影响因子大于1的英文期刊。使用2018年世界银行分类对第一作者、对应作者和最后作者的国家归属进行了分类,以了解不同收入水平的合作模式。结果:分析显示,从2018年到2023年,神经外科出版物稳步增加,第二个三年(2021-2023年)显著增加。来自高收入国家的作者一直占据第一作者、通讯作者和最后作者的大多数位置。关于第一作者身份,来自高收入国家的作者从第一个三年的66%增加到第二个三年的75%。同样,高收入国家的通讯作者在同一时期从75%增加到82%。男性作者主导了所有关键作者角色,在第二个三年里,有127名男性第一作者,而46名女性第一作者。这种男性优势在相应的和最后的作者角色中也持续存在。结论:全球神经外科研究正在增长,但显著的性别差异仍然存在,特别是在中低收入国家/低收入国家,女性研究人员在关键作者角色中的代表性不足,需要有针对性的努力来解决系统性障碍,促进学术领导中的性别平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurosurgical focus
Neurosurgical focus CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-SURGERY
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
261
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Information not localized
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