Gender Disparities in Middle Authorship

Women increasingly occupy jobs in psychological research, but continue to face career barriers. One such barrier is fewer authorship and publication opportunities, with women often having fewer first authorships than men. In this research, we examine the overlooked role of middle authorship. Middle...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alexandra Fleischmann, Laura Van Berkel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2021-03-01
Series:Social Psychological Bulletin
Subjects:
Online Access:https://spb.psychopen.eu/index.php/spb/article/view/2897
id doaj-dc9612334c12429184d2cee672ff12b6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-dc9612334c12429184d2cee672ff12b62021-07-13T15:32:35ZengPsychOpenSocial Psychological Bulletin2569-653X2021-03-0116110.32872/spb.2897spb.2897Gender Disparities in Middle AuthorshipAlexandra Fleischmann0Laura Van Berkel1Social Cognition Center Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, GermanySocial Cognition Center Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, GermanyWomen increasingly occupy jobs in psychological research, but continue to face career barriers. One such barrier is fewer authorship and publication opportunities, with women often having fewer first authorships than men. In this research, we examine the overlooked role of middle authorship. Middle authorship contributes to various indices of productivity, while having lower costs. Study 1 looks at five years of authorship in two major journals in social and personality psychology. Study 2 examines publication records of all social psychology faculty in the Netherlands. Both studies find that women have fewer authorship possibilities: In Study 1, women were underrepresented as authors in academic journals, while women in Study 2 had shorter publication lists. More importantly, this tendency was exacerbated for middle authorship positions. Furthermore, the percentage of middle authorship publications were positively related to more publications overall. A focus on middle authorship highlights previously underestimated challenges women continue to face in psychological research.https://spb.psychopen.eu/index.php/spb/article/view/2897social and personality psychologyauthorshipbibliometricgendercollaboration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandra Fleischmann
Laura Van Berkel
spellingShingle Alexandra Fleischmann
Laura Van Berkel
Gender Disparities in Middle Authorship
Social Psychological Bulletin
social and personality psychology
authorship
bibliometric
gender
collaboration
author_facet Alexandra Fleischmann
Laura Van Berkel
author_sort Alexandra Fleischmann
title Gender Disparities in Middle Authorship
title_short Gender Disparities in Middle Authorship
title_full Gender Disparities in Middle Authorship
title_fullStr Gender Disparities in Middle Authorship
title_full_unstemmed Gender Disparities in Middle Authorship
title_sort gender disparities in middle authorship
publisher PsychOpen
series Social Psychological Bulletin
issn 2569-653X
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Women increasingly occupy jobs in psychological research, but continue to face career barriers. One such barrier is fewer authorship and publication opportunities, with women often having fewer first authorships than men. In this research, we examine the overlooked role of middle authorship. Middle authorship contributes to various indices of productivity, while having lower costs. Study 1 looks at five years of authorship in two major journals in social and personality psychology. Study 2 examines publication records of all social psychology faculty in the Netherlands. Both studies find that women have fewer authorship possibilities: In Study 1, women were underrepresented as authors in academic journals, while women in Study 2 had shorter publication lists. More importantly, this tendency was exacerbated for middle authorship positions. Furthermore, the percentage of middle authorship publications were positively related to more publications overall. A focus on middle authorship highlights previously underestimated challenges women continue to face in psychological research.
topic social and personality psychology
authorship
bibliometric
gender
collaboration
url https://spb.psychopen.eu/index.php/spb/article/view/2897
work_keys_str_mv AT alexandrafleischmann genderdisparitiesinmiddleauthorship
AT lauravanberkel genderdisparitiesinmiddleauthorship
_version_ 1721305211424735232