健康科学研究中的地域和性别不平等:检验研究成果、影响和知名度方面的差异

M. Goyanes, Márton Demeter, Gergő Háló, Carlos Arcila-Calderón, Homero Gil de Zúñiga
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的 在生产和影响水平方面,性别和地域不平衡是全球知识生产中的一个紧迫问题。在健康科学领域,一些研究发现了明显的性别和地域偏见与不平等,而另一些研究则几乎没有发现这种边缘化的经验证据。本研究的目的是澄清有关该主题的模糊性。设计/方法/途径本研究基于对 2017 年至 2020 年从 Scival(Scopus/Scimago)数据库下载的健康科学研究数据(n = 7990)进行的全面系统分析,首先比较了研究生产率中的性别代表性,以及根据地理位置在每篇文献引用量、每篇文献浏览量和每篇文献浏览量得分方面的差异。研究结果表明,在整体学科和子领域层面,生产力中的性别不平等是系统性的。研究结果还表明,在每篇文献引用次数、每篇文献浏览次数和每篇文献浏览次数得分方面存在显著的地域差异,而且性别对地域与(1)每篇文献引用次数和(2)每篇文献浏览次数之间的关系具有交互效应。
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Geographical and gender inequalities in health sciences studies: testing differences in research productivity, impact and visibility
PurposeGender and geographical imbalance in production and impact levels is a pressing issue in global knowledge production. Within Health Sciences, while some studies found stark gender and geographical biases and inequalities, others found little empirical evidence of this marginalization. The purpose of the study is to clear the ambiguity concerning the topic.Design/methodology/approachBased on a comprehensive and systematic analysis of Health Sciences research data downloaded from the Scival (Scopus/Scimago) database from 2017 to 2020 (n = 7,990), this study first compares gender representation in research productivity, as well as differences in terms of citation per document, citations per document view and view per document scores according to geographical location. Additionally, the study clarifies whether there is a geographic bias in productivity and impact measures (i.e. citation per document, citations per document view and view per document) moderated by gender.FindingsResults indicate that gender inequalities in productivity are systematic at the overall disciplinary, as well as the subfield levels. Findings also suggest statistically significant geographical differences in citation per document, citations per document view, and view per document scores, and interaction effect of gender over the relation between geography and (1) the number of citations per view and (2) the number of views per document.Originality/valueThis study contributes to scientometric studies in health sciences by providing insightful findings about the geographical and gender bias in productivity and impact across world regions.
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