We examine gender differences among the six PhD student cohorts 2004–2009 at the California Institute of Technology using a new dataset that includes information on trainees and their advisors and enables us to construct detailed measures of teams at the advisor level. We focus on the relationship between graduate student publications and: (1) their gender; (2) the gender of the advisor, (3) the gender pairing between the advisor and the student and (4) the gender composition of the team. We find that female graduate students coauthor on average 8.5% fewer papers than men; that students writing with female advisors publish 7.7% more. Of particular note is that gender pairing matters: male students working with female advisors publish 10.0%m...
Women in the sciences who earn PhDs are less likely than their male counterparts to pursue tenure-tr...
There is a widespread perception in the academic community that peer review is subject to many biase...
The productivity and performance of men is generally rated more highly than that of women in control...
We examine gender differences among the six PhD student cohorts 2004–2009 at the California Institut...
We examine gender differences among the six PhD student cohorts 2004-2009 at the California Institut...
We examine gender differences among the six PhD student cohorts 2004–2009 at the California Institut...
Gender disparities appear to be decreasing in academia according to a number of metrics, such as gra...
Measures of research productivity have become widely used for obtaining tenure, third party funding,...
The past academic gender literature has focused on the underproduction of academic women in research...
This article examines the impact of gender on researchers’ journal selection decisions, and thereby ...
Prior studies on gender differences in the research output of accounting faculty have provided contr...
The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of personal characteristics, institutional factor...
This Article presents original empirical research documenting a significant gender disparity in stud...
Women in the sciences who earn PhDs are less likely than their male counterparts to pursue tenure-tr...
There is a widespread perception in the academic community that peer review is subject to many biase...
The productivity and performance of men is generally rated more highly than that of women in control...
We examine gender differences among the six PhD student cohorts 2004–2009 at the California Institut...
We examine gender differences among the six PhD student cohorts 2004-2009 at the California Institut...
We examine gender differences among the six PhD student cohorts 2004–2009 at the California Institut...
Gender disparities appear to be decreasing in academia according to a number of metrics, such as gra...
Measures of research productivity have become widely used for obtaining tenure, third party funding,...
The past academic gender literature has focused on the underproduction of academic women in research...
This article examines the impact of gender on researchers’ journal selection decisions, and thereby ...
Prior studies on gender differences in the research output of accounting faculty have provided contr...
The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of personal characteristics, institutional factor...
This Article presents original empirical research documenting a significant gender disparity in stud...
Women in the sciences who earn PhDs are less likely than their male counterparts to pursue tenure-tr...
There is a widespread perception in the academic community that peer review is subject to many biase...
The productivity and performance of men is generally rated more highly than that of women in control...