Acknowledgements found in scholarly papers allow for credit attribution of nonauthor contributors. As such, they are associated with a different kind of recognition than authorship. While several studies have shown that social factors affect authorship and citation practices, few analyses have been performed on acknowledgements. Based on 878,250 acknowledgees mentioned in 291,167 papers published between 2015 and 2017, this study analyzes the gender and academic status of individuals named in the acknowledgements of scientific papers. Our results show that gender disparities generally found in authorship can be extended to acknowledgements, and that women are even more underrepresented in acknowledgements section than in authors’ lists. Our...
<div><p>For the past 50 years, acknowledgments have been studied as important paratextual traces of ...
Subtle gender dynamics in the publishing process involving collaboration, peer-review, readership, c...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...
This article reports the findings of a diachronic study of acknowledgement practices in 300 randomly...
Gender disparities appear to be decreasing in academia according to a number of metrics, such as gra...
Gender disparity in terms of citation performance has been widely documented in the scientific liter...
How common is self-citation in scholarly publication, and does the practice vary by gender? Using no...
arXiv:1706.06334[Purpose]: Science is subject to a normative structure that includes how the contrib...
Purpose: Women remain underrepresented in the production of scientific literature and relatively li...
Citations are one of the key indicators of scientific influence. However, citations are not entirely...
<p>In molecular biology, women are overrepresented as first author but underrepresented at the last ...
Gender disparities appear to be decreasing in academia according to a number of metrics, such as gra...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...
For the past 50 years, acknowledgments have been studied as important paratextual traces of research...
The position of an author on the byline of a paper affects the inferences readers make about their c...
<div><p>For the past 50 years, acknowledgments have been studied as important paratextual traces of ...
Subtle gender dynamics in the publishing process involving collaboration, peer-review, readership, c...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...
This article reports the findings of a diachronic study of acknowledgement practices in 300 randomly...
Gender disparities appear to be decreasing in academia according to a number of metrics, such as gra...
Gender disparity in terms of citation performance has been widely documented in the scientific liter...
How common is self-citation in scholarly publication, and does the practice vary by gender? Using no...
arXiv:1706.06334[Purpose]: Science is subject to a normative structure that includes how the contrib...
Purpose: Women remain underrepresented in the production of scientific literature and relatively li...
Citations are one of the key indicators of scientific influence. However, citations are not entirely...
<p>In molecular biology, women are overrepresented as first author but underrepresented at the last ...
Gender disparities appear to be decreasing in academia according to a number of metrics, such as gra...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...
For the past 50 years, acknowledgments have been studied as important paratextual traces of research...
The position of an author on the byline of a paper affects the inferences readers make about their c...
<div><p>For the past 50 years, acknowledgments have been studied as important paratextual traces of ...
Subtle gender dynamics in the publishing process involving collaboration, peer-review, readership, c...
It was recently reported that men self-cite >50% more often than women across a wide variety of disc...