Despite increased enrolment of women and students from underrepresented racial/ethnic groups in doctoral programs, notable inequalities in academic careers persist. We investigate one potential source of these inequalities: publication rates during graduate school. Results, based on a sample of doctoral students in biological sciences across 53 institutions, indicate that both white women and students from underrepresented racial/ethnic groups (African American and Latinx) have lower publication rates than white men. Notably, these gaps grow over time and are not explained by background factors, socialization experiences, or family obligations. The same patterns persist for first-authored publications for African American and Latinx student...
Increasing biomedical workforce diversity remains a persistent challenge. Recent reports have shown ...
The loss of talented women from senior academic positions has partly resulted from a lower number of...
Efforts to understand gender segregation within and among science disciplines have focused on both s...
Although extensive research exists on the publishing success of academics, few studies have examined...
Female researchers remain underrepresented in higher academic ranks, even within female-dominated fi...
Two independent surveys of PhD students in STEM fields at the University of California, Berkeley, in...
There is constant under-representation of women and racial minorities in the research workforce. Pas...
Women in the sciences who earn PhDs are less likely than their male counterparts to pursue tenure-tr...
Women make up over one-half of all doctoral recipients in biology-related fields but are vastly unde...
Our study highlights specific ways in which race and gender create inequality in the workplace. Usin...
Equitable gender representation is an important aspect of scientific workforce development to secure...
ABSTRACT Despite 50% of biology Ph.D. graduates being women, the number of women that advance in aca...
Our vision: within the next few decades the composition of the faculty of cell biology, and of all b...
Women continue to receive fewer doctoral and first-professional degrees than men, even though women ...
Our analysis reinforces the overrepresentation of White authors across institution types, even withi...
Increasing biomedical workforce diversity remains a persistent challenge. Recent reports have shown ...
The loss of talented women from senior academic positions has partly resulted from a lower number of...
Efforts to understand gender segregation within and among science disciplines have focused on both s...
Although extensive research exists on the publishing success of academics, few studies have examined...
Female researchers remain underrepresented in higher academic ranks, even within female-dominated fi...
Two independent surveys of PhD students in STEM fields at the University of California, Berkeley, in...
There is constant under-representation of women and racial minorities in the research workforce. Pas...
Women in the sciences who earn PhDs are less likely than their male counterparts to pursue tenure-tr...
Women make up over one-half of all doctoral recipients in biology-related fields but are vastly unde...
Our study highlights specific ways in which race and gender create inequality in the workplace. Usin...
Equitable gender representation is an important aspect of scientific workforce development to secure...
ABSTRACT Despite 50% of biology Ph.D. graduates being women, the number of women that advance in aca...
Our vision: within the next few decades the composition of the faculty of cell biology, and of all b...
Women continue to receive fewer doctoral and first-professional degrees than men, even though women ...
Our analysis reinforces the overrepresentation of White authors across institution types, even withi...
Increasing biomedical workforce diversity remains a persistent challenge. Recent reports have shown ...
The loss of talented women from senior academic positions has partly resulted from a lower number of...
Efforts to understand gender segregation within and among science disciplines have focused on both s...