Women Authors Considerably Underrepresented in Retracted medical Research
GENEVA, Switzerland – A new study reveals โaโค striking disparity in retractions within medical research: women’s names appearโค on just 23% of โauthor โslots in nearly 900 retracted articles published โขbetween 2008 and 2017. The research,โ published November 19 in PLoS ONE, suggests women may be less frequently associated with research leading to retraction, but theโข reasons remain complex.
Theโ study, led by Paul Sebo,โฃ an internal medicine specialist and researcher at the University of Geneva, utilized an artificial intelligence tool toโค infer author gender based on first names. Findings showed womenโ held 16.5% of first-author positions and 12.7% of last-author positions on retracted papers. This contrasts sharplyโข with โa previousโค analysis of all articles from the same journals โคand โฃtimeframe, which foundโ women representedโข 41-45% of first authors and 26-33% of last โauthors.1
“thisโ is a really interesting, creativeโค and robust study,” says Curt Rice, who promotes publishing literacy at the Publishing Unlocked project in Oslo, Norway. “The article invites us to dig into issues like negotiations about authorship and theโข likelihood of scrutiny.”
While acknowledging the limitations โคof gender-prediction โtools – including thier inability to โขaccount for non-binary identities and potential inaccuracies with non-Western names โ- Sebo conducted โฃa manual check of 200 names and found no discrepancies.
In an email โto Nature, Sebo theorized the disparity may โคbe linked to women’s underrepresentation inโฃ senior academic roles and leadership of research projects.โ He suggests this could result in women being lessโฃ exposed to the “kinds of responsibilities (and risks) that are โmore commonly associated with retractions.”
The findings addโ to existing data showing women areโค generally under-representedโค in medical research.2
1 โค Sebo, P. et al. PLoS ONE (2023).
2 nature. โขhttps://www.nature.com/articles/d43978-021-00132-4