Gender issues in fundamental physics: Strumia's bibliometric analysis fails to account for key confounders and confuses correlation with causation
Philip Ball, T. Benjamin Britton, Erin Hengel, Philip Moriarty, Rachel, A. Oliver, Gina Rippon, Angela Saini, and Jessica Wade

TL;DR
This paper critiques Strumia's bibliometric analysis of gender differences in high-energy physics, highlighting methodological flaws and confounders, and provides a re-analysis suggesting women are cited more than men.
Contribution
It identifies key confounders overlooked in Strumia's study and offers a re-analysis that challenges his conclusions about gender citation disparities.
Findings
Strumia's analysis lacks adjustment for confounders.
Re-analysis shows female-authored papers are cited more.
Challenges the 'greater male variability' hypothesis.
Abstract
Alessandro Strumia recently published a survey of gender differences in publications and citations in high-energy physics (HEP). In addition to providing full access to the data, code, and methodology, Strumia (2020) systematically describes and accounts for gender differences in HEP citation networks. His analysis points both to ongoing difficulties in attracting women to high-energy physics and an encouraging-though slow-trend in improvement. Unfortunately, however, the time and effort Strumia (2020) devoted to collating and quantifying the data are not matched by a similar rigour in interpreting the results. To support his conclusions, he selectively cites available literature and fails to adequately adjust for a range of confounding factors. For example, his analyses do not consider how unobserved factors -- e.g., a tendency to overcite well-known authors -- drive a wedge between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate Change Communication and Perception
