Gender and collaboration patterns in a temporal scientific authorship network
Gecia Bravo-Hermsdorff, Valkyrie Felso, Emily Ray, Lee M. Gunderson,, Mary E. Helander, Joana Maria, and Yael Niv

TL;DR
This study analyzes gender differences in scientific collaboration patterns over time within INFORMS, revealing persistent disparities and subtle structural differences between male and female authorship networks despite increased participation of women since 1980.
Contribution
The paper introduces a methodology for quantifying the structural role of authorships in temporal collaboration networks and applies it to reveal gender-based differences in scientific collaboration patterns.
Findings
Women’s participation in INFORMS increased since 1980.
Women constitute less than 25% of authors, especially among prolific authors.
Systematic differences in collaboration patterns between genders were identified.
Abstract
One can point to a variety of historical milestones for gender equality in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics), however, practical effects are incremental and ongoing. It is important to quantify gender differences in subdomains of scientific work in order to detect potential biases and monitor progress. In this work, we study the relevance of gender in scientific collaboration patterns in the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS), a professional society with sixteen peer-reviewed journals. Using their publication data from 1952 to 2016, we constructed a large temporal bipartite network between authors and publications, and augmented the author nodes with gender labels. We characterized differences in several basic statistics of this network over time, highlighting how they have changed with respect to relevant historical events. We…
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