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Patterns of authorship in ecology and evolution: First, last, and corresponding authorship vary with gender and geography

机译:生态和进化中的作者身份模式:第一,最后以及相应的作者身份随性别和地理位置而变化

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The position of an author on the byline of a paper affects the inferences readers make about their contributions to the research. We examine gender differences in authorship in the ecology literature using two datasets: submissions to six journals between 2010 and 2015 (regardless of whether they were accepted), and manuscripts published by 151 journals between 2009 and 2015. Women were less likely to be last (i.e., “senior”) authors (averaging ~23% across journals, years, and datasets) and sole authors (~24%), but more likely to be first author (~38%), relative to their overall frequency of authorship (~31%). However, the proportion of women in all authorship roles, except sole authorship, has increased year‐on‐year. Women were less likely to be authors on papers with male last authors, and all‐male papers were more abundant than expected given the overall gender ratio. Women were equally well represented on papers published in higher versus lower impact factor journals at all authorship positions. Female first authors were less likely to serve as corresponding author of their papers; this difference increased with the degree of gender inequality in the author's home country, but did not depend on the gender of the last author. First authors from non‐English‐speaking countries were less likely to serve as corresponding author of their papers, especially if the last author was from an English‐speaking country. That women more often delegate corresponding authorship to one of their coauthors may increase the likelihood that readers undervalue their role in the research by shifting credit for their contributions to coauthors. We suggest that author contribution statements be more universally adopted and that these statements declare how and/or why the corresponding author was selected for this role.
机译:作者在论文旁注中的位置会影响读者对其研究贡献的推论。我们使用两个数据集检查了生态文献中作者身份的性别差异:2010年至2015年间向六种期刊提交的论文(无论是否被接受),以及2009年至2015年间151种期刊发表的手稿。例如,相对于作者的总体作者身份,“资深”作者(在期刊,年份和数据集中平均占23%)和唯一作者(约24%),但更有可能是第一作者(约38%)( 〜31%)。但是,除独任职务外,担任所有职务的妇女比例逐年增加。在男性论文的最后作者中,女性不太可能是女性论文作者,而且考虑到总体性别比例,全男性论文比预期的要丰富。在所有作者职位上,影响因子较高和较低的期刊上发表的论文中,妇女的代表性均相同。女性第一作者不太可能担任其论文的通讯作者。这种差异随着作者所在国性别不平等程度的增加而增加,但并不取决于最后一位作者的性别。来自非英语国家的第一作者不太可能担任其论文的通讯作者,尤其是如果最后一位作者来自英语国家。女性通常将相应的作者身份委派给其中一位合著者,这可能会增加读者低估其在研究中的作用的可能性,方法是转移对共同作者的贡献的信誉。我们建议更广泛地采用作者贡献声明,并且这些声明声明如何和/或为什么选择相应的作者担任该职务。

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