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Main Authors: Oliveira, Diego F. M., Huang, Qian
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.08401
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author Oliveira, Diego F. M.
Huang, Qian
author_facet Oliveira, Diego F. M.
Huang, Qian
contents This study examines gender disparities in communication research through citation metrics, authorship patterns, team composition, and faculty salaries. Using data from 62,359 papers across 121 communication journals, we find that while female authors are increasingly represented, citation gaps persist, with sole-authored papers by women receiving fewer citations than those by men, especially in smaller teams. Team composition analysis reveals a tendency toward gender homophily, with single-gender teams being more common. In top U.S. communication journals, female authors face underrepresentation and citation disparities favoring male authors. Salary analysis from leading U.S. public universities shows that female faculty earn lower salaries at the Assistant Professor level, though disparities lessen at higher ranks. These findings highlight the need for greater efforts to promote gender equity through inclusive collaboration, equitable citation practices, and fair compensation.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_08401
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Navigating Gender Disparities in Communication Research Leadership: Academic Recognition, Career Development, and Compensation
Oliveira, Diego F. M.
Huang, Qian
Digital Libraries
Social and Information Networks
This study examines gender disparities in communication research through citation metrics, authorship patterns, team composition, and faculty salaries. Using data from 62,359 papers across 121 communication journals, we find that while female authors are increasingly represented, citation gaps persist, with sole-authored papers by women receiving fewer citations than those by men, especially in smaller teams. Team composition analysis reveals a tendency toward gender homophily, with single-gender teams being more common. In top U.S. communication journals, female authors face underrepresentation and citation disparities favoring male authors. Salary analysis from leading U.S. public universities shows that female faculty earn lower salaries at the Assistant Professor level, though disparities lessen at higher ranks. These findings highlight the need for greater efforts to promote gender equity through inclusive collaboration, equitable citation practices, and fair compensation.
title Navigating Gender Disparities in Communication Research Leadership: Academic Recognition, Career Development, and Compensation
topic Digital Libraries
Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.08401