Study Finds Gender Imbalance in Media Coverage of Scientific Research

Among academic scholars in the United States, research led by women often gets less media attention than research led by men, according to a new study from scholars at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

To examine how corresponding authors’ gender relates to scientific media coverage, the authors analyzed 1 million papers authored by U.S.-based scholars with 1.2 million media citations. Overall, women-led papers are cited less frequently in media coverage than men-led papers. However, women’s research is more likely to be featured if it’s in a field where women are underrepresented, rather than in more gender-balanced fields.

Among different outlets, women’s research is less likely to appear in national outlets than local outlets and more likely to be featured in liberal-leaning outlets than conservative-leaning publications. Furthermore, men-led papers are more likely to be associated with positive sentiment in news text, while women-led research is more likely to be viewed negatively.

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