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Gender issues in fundamental physics: Strumia’s bibliometric analysis fails to account for key confounders and confuses correlation with causation

Ball, Philip; Britton, T Benjamin; Hengel, Erin; Moriarty, Philip; Oliver, Rachel A; Rippon, Gina; Saini, Angela; Wade, Jessica

Gender issues in fundamental physics: Strumia’s bibliometric analysis fails to account for key confounders and confuses correlation with causation Thumbnail


Authors

Philip Ball

T Benjamin Britton

Erin Hengel

Rachel A Oliver

Gina Rippon

Angela Saini

Jessica Wade



Abstract

Alessandro Strumia recently published a survey of gender differences in publications and citations in high-energy physics (HEP). In addition to providing full access to the data, code, and methodology, Strumia (2020) systematically describes and accounts for gender differences in HEP citation networks. His analysis points both to ongoing difficulties in attracting women to high-energy physics and an encouraging-though slow-trend in improvement. Unfortunately, however, the time and effort Strumia (2020) devoted to collating and quantifying the data are not matched by a similar rigour in interpreting the results. To support his conclusions, he selectively cites available literature and fails to adequately adjust for a range of confounding factors. For example, his analyses do not consider how unobserved factors-e.g., a tendency to overcite well-known authors-drive a wedge between quality and citations and correlate with author gender. He also fails to take into account many structural and non-structural factors-including, but not limited to, direct discrimination and the expectations women form (and actions they take) in response to it-that undoubtedly lead to gender differences in productivity. We therefore believe that a number of Strumia's conclusions are not supported by his analysis. Indeed, we re-analyse a subsample of solo-authored papers from his data, adjusting for year and journal of publication, authors' research age and their lifetime "fame". Our re-analysis suggests that female-authored papers are actually cited more than male-authored papers. This finding is inconsistent with the "greater male variability" hypothesis Strumia (2020) proposes to explain many of his results. In the conclusion to his paper, Strumia states that "..dealing with complex systems, any simple interpretation can easily be incomplete…". We agree entirely. Strumia's simple-and, more importantly, simplistic-analysis and interpretation are far from complete.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 15, 2021
Online Publication Date Apr 8, 2021
Publication Date Apr 8, 2021
Deposit Date Jul 3, 2021
Publicly Available Date Jul 6, 2021
Journal Quantitative Science Studies
Print ISSN 2641-3337
Electronic ISSN 2641-3337
Publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2
Issue 1
Pages 263-272
DOI https://doi.org/10.1162/qss_a_00117
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/5755755
Publisher URL https://direct.mit.edu/qss/article/2/1/263/99125/Gender-issues-in-fundamental-physics-Strumia-s

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