The Role of Gender in Asking Questions at Cool Stars 18 and 19
Sarah J. Schmidt, Stephanie Douglas, Natalie M. Gosnell, Philip S., Muirhead, Rachel S. Booth, James R. A. Davenport, Gregory N. Mace

TL;DR
This study analyzes gender representation among attendees and question askers at Cool Stars 18 and 19, revealing gender disparities in question-asking behavior and emphasizing the need for more comprehensive diversity data.
Contribution
It provides new data on gender dynamics in question sessions at astronomy conferences and compares these with attendee demographics, challenging previous assumptions about gender influence.
Findings
Men asked 75-79% of questions despite being 63-69% of attendees.
Gender of session chair or speaker did not significantly affect question gender balance.
Women and men speakers received a similar number of questions.
Abstract
We examine the gender balance of the 18th and 19th meetings of the Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stellar Systems and the Sun (CS18 and CS19). The percent of female attendees at both meetings (31% at CS18 and 37% at CS19) was higher than the percent of women in the American Astronomical Society (25%) and the International Astronomical Union (18%). The representation of women in Cool Stars as SOC members, invited speakers, and contributed speakers was similar to or exceeded the percent of women attending the meetings. We requested that conference attendees assist in a project to collect data on the gender of astronomers asking questions after talks. Using this data, we found that men were over-represented (and women were under-represented) in the question sessions after each talk. Men asked 79% of the questions at CS18 and 75% of the questions at CS19, but were 69% and 63% of the attendees…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate Change Communication and Perception
