1985年至2019年在临床神经心理学期刊上发表的文章作者署名中的性别差异。

The Clinical neuropsychologist Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Epub Date: 2020-11-08 DOI:10.1080/13854046.2020.1843713
Anastasia Matchanova, Gunes Avci, Michelle A Babicz, Jennifer L Thompson, Briana Johnson, Irene J Ke, Samina Rahman, Kelli L Sullivan, David P Sheppard, Yenifer Morales, Savanna M Tierney, Victoria M Kordovski, Ilex Beltran-Najera, Nathalie Ulrich, Shoshana Pilloff, Keith Owen Yeates, Steven Paul Woods
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引用次数: 5

摘要

目的:女性在临床神经心理学中越来越普遍,但性别偏见和差异在多个专业领域仍然存在。本研究调查了临床神经心理学常用期刊中历史作者趋势的潜在性别差异。方法:对1985 ~ 2019年6种临床神经心理学期刊发表的10531篇论文进行分析。使用OpenGenderTracking Project数据库,每个作者都被编码为男性或女性。结果:临床神经心理学文章署名作者中,女性平均占43.3%(±30.6%),其中50.3%为主要作者和/或通讯作者。研究结果因期刊而异,《儿童神经心理学》在几个研究指标中最能代表女性。随着时间的推移,女性在作者中所占的比例越来越大,临床神经心理学中的性别差距比最近报道的更广泛的心理学领域要小;然而,最近女性作为作者的比率落后于女性在临床神经心理学中的流行。令人鼓舞的是,性别与文章被引用的次数无关。包含女性领导角色的文章总体上有更多的作者,特别是更多的女性作者。结论:临床神经心理学期刊的女性作者人数不足,但她们正变得越来越普遍,她们的论文被引用的频率与男性一样高。努力增加女性作为研究导师和赞助者,可能有助于进一步缩小临床神经心理学发表的性别差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gender disparities in the author bylines of articles published in clinical neuropsychology journals from 1985 to 2019.

Objective: Women are becoming more prevalent in clinical neuropsychology, but gender bias and disparities persist across multiple professional domains. This study examined potential gender disparities in historical authorship trends across commonly read journals in clinical neuropsychology. Method: Analyses were conducted on 10,531 articles published in six clinical neuropsychology journals from 1985 to 2019. Each author was coded as either a man or a woman using the OpenGenderTracking Project database. Results: On average, women comprised 43.3% (±30.6) of the authors listed in clinical neuropsychology article bylines and were lead and/or corresponding author on 50.3% of these papers. Findings varied by journal, with Child Neuropsychology having the best representation of women across several study metrics. Women comprised an increasing proportion of authors over time and the gender gap in clinical neuropsychology is smaller than was recently reported for the broader field of psychology; nevertheless, the recent rates of women as authors lag behind the prevalence of women in clinical neuropsychology. Encouragingly, gender was not associated with the number of times an article was cited. Articles that included women in leadership roles had significantly more authors overall and specifically more women authors. Conclusions: Women are under-represented as authors in clinical neuropsychology journals, but they are becoming more common and their papers are cited just as frequently as men. Efforts to increase women as research mentors and sponsors may help to further close the publishing gender gap in clinical neuropsychology.

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