Can social media combat gender inequalities in academia? Measuring the prevalence of the Matilda effect in communication

Author:

Song Yunya1ORCID,Wang Xiaohui2ORCID,Li Guanrong13

Affiliation:

1. School of Communication, Hong Kong Baptist University , Hong Kong, China

2. Department of Media and Communication, City University of Hong Kong , Hong Kong, China

3. School of Journalism & Communication, Nanjing University , Nanjing, China

Abstract

Abstract This study sought to investigate whether scholarly impact and academic influence differ between men and women in the field of communication and the extent to which the gender gap has persisted on social media platforms, an arena increasingly used for research dissemination. Data were collected from 10,736 articles, published in prominent communication journals between 2012 and 2022, using a combination of three sources: OpenAlex, Altmetric, and Twitter. The gender of 6,827 first authors was identified using ChatGPT, with an accuracy of 0.94. The findings confirmed the presence of the Matilda effect, indicating a bias toward male scholars in terms of research performance, academic mobility, and online popularity. Furthermore, the study revealed uneven gains between male and female scholars in their use of social media for research dissemination. These results have implications for how science communities can effectively promote research on social media.

Funder

InnoHK initiative

The Government of the HKSAR

Laboratory for AI-Powered Financial Technologies

Initiation Grant for Faculty Niche Research Areas

Hong Kong Baptist University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference70 articles.

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2. Social media for scientists;Anonymous;Nature Cell Biology,2018

3. Gender disparities in high-quality research revealed by Nature Index journals;Bendels;PLOS One,2018

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