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Matilda effect

The Matilda effect is a bias against acknowledging the achievements of women scientists whose work is attributed to their male colleagues. This phenomenon was first described by suffragist and abolitionist Matilda Joslyn Gage (1826–98) in her essay, "Woman as Inventor" (first published as a tract in 1870 and in the North American Review in 1883). The term "Matilda effect" was coined in 1993 by science historian Margaret W. Rossiter.[1][2]

Matilda effect

Rossiter provides several examples of this effect. Trotula (Trota of Salerno), a 12th-century Italian woman physician, wrote books which, after her death, were attributed to male authors. Nineteenth- and twentieth-century cases illustrating the Matilda effect include those of Nettie Stevens,[3] Lise Meitner, Marietta Blau, Rosalind Franklin, and Jocelyn Bell Burnell.

The Matilda effect was compared to the Matthew effect, whereby an eminent scientist often gets more credit than a comparatively unknown researcher, even if their work is shared or similar.[4][5]

Research

In 2012, two female researchers from Radboud University Nijmegen showed that in the Netherlands the sex of professorship candidates influences the evaluation made of them.[6] Similar cases are described by two Italian female researchers in a study[7] corroborated further by a Spanish study.[8] On the other hand, several studies found no difference between citations and impact of publications of male authors and those of female authors.[9][10][11]

Swiss researchers have indicated that mass media ask male scientists more often to contribute on shows than they do their female fellow scientists.[12]

According to one U.S. study, "although overt gender discrimination generally continues to decline in American society," "women continue to be disadvantaged with respect to the receipt of scientific awards and prizes, particularly for research."[13]

Examples

Examples of women subjected to the Matilda effect:

  • Theano of Crotone, (6th century BCE) - early philosopher who did work in mathematics, but most of her work was overshadowed by or attributed to her husband, father, or teacher (depending on the source),[14] Pythagoras.[15]
  • Trotula (Trota of Salerno, 12th century) – Italian physician, author of works which, after her death, were attributed to male authors. Hostility toward women as teachers and healers led to denial of her very existence. At first her work was credited to her husband and son, but as information got passed on, monks confused her name for that of a man. She is not mentioned in the "Dictionary of Scientific Biography."[16]
  • Jeanne Baret (1740–1807) – French botanist, first woman to have completed a circumnavigation of the globe. Partner and collaborator of the botanist Philibert Commerson, she joined the expedition of Louis-Antoine de Bougainville disguised as a man. They collected the first specimens of Bougainvillea. Most botanical discoveries have been attributed to Commerson alone, after whom about a hundred of species have been named. She was immortalized for the first much later with the description of Solanum baretiae [es][17] in 2012.
  • Nettie Stevens (1861–1912) – discoverer of the XY sex-determination system. Her crucial studies of mealworms revealed for the first time that an organism's sex is determined by its chromosomes rather than by environmental or other factors. Stevens greatly influenced the scientific community's transition to this new line of inquiry: Chromosomal sex determination.[18] However, Thomas Hunt Morgan, a distinguished geneticist at the time, is generally credited with this discovery.[19] Despite her extensive work in the field of genetics, Stevens' contributions to Morgan's work are often disregarded.[20]
  • Mary Whiton Calkins (1863–1930) – Harvard University discovered that stimuli that were paired with other vivid stimuli would be recalled more easily. She also discovered that duration of exposure led to better recall. These findings, along with her paired-associations method, would later be used by G.E. Müller and E.B. Titchener, without any credit being given to Calkins.
  • Gerty Cori (1896–1957) – Nobel-laureate biochemist, worked for years as her husband's assistant, despite having equal qualification as him for a professorial position.
  • Rosalind Franklin (1920–1958) – now recognized as an important contributor to the 1953 discovery of DNA structure. At the time of the discovery by Francis Crick and James Watson, for which the two men received a 1962 Nobel Prize, her work was not properly credited (though Watson described the crucial importance of her contribution, in his 1968 book The Double Helix).
  • Marthe Gautier (born 1925) – now recognized for her important role in the discovery of the chromosomal abnormality that causes Down syndrome, a discovery previously attributed exclusively to Jérôme Lejeune.
  • Marian Diamond (1926–2017) – working at the University of California, Berkeley, experimentally discovered the phenomenon of brain plasticity, which ran contrary to previous neurological dogma. When her seminal 1964 paper[21] was about to be published, she discovered that the names of her two secondary co-authors, David Krech and Mark Rosenzweig, had been placed before her name (which, additionally, had been placed in parentheses). She protested that she had done the essential work described in the paper, and her name was then put in first place (without parentheses). The incident is described in a 2016 documentary film, My Love Affair with the Brain: The Life and Science of Dr. Marian Diamond.[22]
  • Harriet Zuckerman (born 1937) – Zuckerman supplied core data for her husband R.K. Merton's famous concept of the Matthew effect, which denotes the phenomenon where scientists of higher renown will typically gain substantially more credit and status from their work than their lesser known peers. In the initial 1968 publication on the concept her role was diminished to a series of endnotes rather than a co-authorship, which Merton later acknowledged as a mistake in subsequent versions of the article.[23][24]
  • Programmers of ENIAC (dedicated 1946) – several women made substantial contributions to the project, including Adele Goldstine, Kay McNulty, Betty Jennings, Betty Snyder, Marlyn Wescoff, Fran Bilas and Ruth Lichterman, but histories of ENIAC have typically not addressed these contributions, and have at times focused on hardware accomplishments rather than software accomplishments.[25]

Examples of men scientists favored over women scientists for Nobel Prizes:

“No more Matildas”

The Spanish Association of Women Researchers and Technologists (AMIT) has created a movement called “No more Matildas” that honours Matilda Joslyn Gage.[32] The campaign’s goal is to promote the number of women in science from an early age, eliminating stereotypes.

Other

Ben Barres (1954–2017) was a neurobiologist at Stanford University Medical School who transitioned from female to male. He spoke of his scientific achievements having been perceived differently, depending on what sex others thought he was at the time.[33] Prior to his transition to male, Barres' scientific achievements were ascribed to men or devalued, but after transitioning to male, his achievements were credited to him and lauded.

See also

References

  1. ^ Rossiter, Margaret W. (1993). "The Matthew/Matilda effect in science". Social Studies of Science. London, UK. 23 (2): 325–341. doi:10.1177/030631293023002004. ISSN 0306-3127. S2CID 145225097.
  2. ^ Flegal, Katherine M. (21 August 2022). "A female career in research". Annual Review of Nutrition. 42 (1): annurev–nutr–062220-103411. doi:10.1146/annurev-nutr-062220-103411. ISSN 0199-9885. PMID 35363538. S2CID 247866328. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  3. ^ Resnick, Brian (7 July 2016). "Nettie Stevens discovered XY sex chromosomes. She didn't get credit because she had two X's". Vox. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
  4. ^ Rossiter, Margaret W. (1993). "The Matthew Matilda Effect in Science". Social Studies of Science. Vol. 23, no. 2. pp. 325–341. ISSN 0306-3127. JSTOR 285482.
  5. ^ Dominus, Susan (October 2019). "Women scientists were written out of history. It's Margaret Rossiter's lifelong mission to fix that". Smithsonian Magazine. Vol. 50, no. 6. p. 48.
  6. ^ van den Brink, Marieke; Benschop, Yvonne (2011). "Gender practices in the construction of academic excellence: Sheep with five legs". Organization. 19 (4): 507–524. doi:10.1177/1350508411414293. S2CID 140512614.
  7. ^ Andrea Cerroni; Zenia Simonella (2012). "Ethos and symbolic violence among women of science: An empirical study". Social Science Information. 51 (2): 165–182. doi:10.1177/0539018412437102. hdl:10281/30675. S2CID 7176626.
  8. ^ Jiménez-Rodrigo, María Luisa; Martínez-Morante, Emilia; García-Calvente, María del Mar; Álvarez-Dardet, Carlos (2008). "Through gender parity in scientific publications". Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. 62 (6): 474–475. doi:10.1136/jech.2008.074294. hdl:10045/8447. PMID 18477742. S2CID 12399729.
  9. ^ Hegarty, Peter; Walton, Zoe (2012). "The Consequences of Predicting Scientific Impact in Psychology Using Journal Impact Factors" (PDF). Perspectives on Psychological Science. 7 (1): 72–78. doi:10.1177/1745691611429356. PMID 26168426. S2CID 25605006.
  10. ^ Baldi, Stephane (1998). "Normative versus social constructivist Processes in the allocation of citations: A Network-Analytic Model". American Sociological Review. 63 (6): 829–846. doi:10.2307/2657504. JSTOR 2657504.
  11. ^ Haslam, Nick; Ban, Lauren; Kaufmann, Leah; Loughnan, Stephen; Peters, Kim; Whelan, Jennifer; Wilson, Sam (2008). "What makes an article influential? Predicting impact in social and personality psychology". Scientometrics. 76 (1): 169–185. doi:10.1007/s11192-007-1892-8. S2CID 5648498.
  12. ^ von Roten, Fabienne Crettaz (2011). "Gender differences in scientists' public outreach and engagement activities". Science Communication. 33 (1): 52–75. doi:10.1177/1075547010378658. S2CID 220675370.
  13. ^ Lincoln, Anne E.; Pincus, Stephanie; Koster, Janet Bandows; Leboy, Phoebe S. (2012). "The Matilda effect in science: Awards and prizes in the US, 1990s and 2000s". Social Studies of Science. 42 (2): 307–320. doi:10.1177/0306312711435830. PMID 22849001. S2CID 24673577.
  14. ^ "Crotone, Theano of". History of Scientific Women.
  15. ^ "Biographies of Women Mathematicians". agnesscott.edu. Decatur, GA: Agnes Scott College.
  16. ^ Rossiter, Margaret W. (1993). "The Matthew / Matilda effect in science". Social Studies of Science. 23 (2): 325–341. doi:10.1177/030631293023002004. JSTOR 285482. S2CID 145225097.
  17. ^ Tepe, E.; Ridley, G.; Bohs, L. (2012). "A new species of Solanum named for Jeanne Baret, an overlooked contributor to the history of botany". PhytoKeys (8): 37–47. doi:10.3897/phytokeys.8.2101. PMC 3254248. PMID 22287929.
  18. ^ Hagen, Joel (1996). Doing Biology. Glenview, IL: Harper Collins. pp. 37–46.
  19. ^ a b c "6 Women scientists who were snubbed due to sexism". Washington, DC: National Geographic Society. 19 May 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  20. ^ "Nettie Maria Stevens (1861–1912)". embryo.asu.edu. The Embryo Project Encyclopedia. Tempe, AZ: Arizona State University. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  21. ^ Diamond, Marian C.; Krech, David; Rosenzweig, Mark R. (1964). "The effects of an enriched environment on the histology of the rat cerebral cortex". The Journal of Comparative Neurology. 123: 111–119. doi:10.1002/cne.901230110. PMID 14199261. S2CID 30997263.
  22. ^ "Luna Productions". lunaproductions.com.
  23. ^ Merton, R.K. "The Matthew effect in science: The reward and communication systems of science are considered" (PDF). Garfield Library. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  24. ^ Merton, R.K. "The Matthew effect in science, II : Cumulative advantage and the symbolism of intellectual property" (PDF). Garfield Library. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  25. ^ Light, Jennifer S. (1999). "When computers were women" (PDF). Technology and Culture. 40 (3): 455–483. doi:10.1353/tech.1999.0128. S2CID 108407884.
  26. ^ Marshak, R.E.; Wiesner, E.; Settle, F., Jr. (14 April 2013) [29 July 1960, July 2001]. . Science Week. On elementary particles in physics (reprint ed.). Archived from the original on 14 April 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  27. ^ Sime, Ruth Lewin (2012). "Marietta Blau in the history of cosmic rays". Physics Today. Vol. 65, no. 10. p. 8. Bibcode:2012PhT....65j...8S. doi:10.1063/PT.3.1728.
  28. ^ Wu, C. S.; Ambler, E.; Hayward, R.W.; Hoppes, D.D.; Hudson, R.P. (1957). "Experimental Test of Parity Conservation in Beta Decay". Physical Review. 105 (4): 1413–1415. Bibcode:1957PhRv..105.1413W. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.105.1413.
  29. ^ "Chien-Shiung Wu" (Press release). Wolf Prize Laureate in Physics 1978. Wolf Fund. 9 December 2018. for her persistent and successful exploration of the weak interaction which helped establish the precise form and the non conservation of parity for this new natural force.
  30. ^ "CensorshipIndex". www.esthermlederberg.com. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  31. ^ "Esther Lederberg, pioneer in genetics, dies at 83" (obituary). Stanford University. 29 November 2006. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  32. ^ ""No more Matildas", the new AMIT awareness campaign". 25 March 2021. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  33. ^ Vedantam, Shankar (12 July 2006). "Male scientist writes of life as female scientist: Biologist who underwent sex change describes biases against women". The Washington Post. Washington, DC.

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The Matilda effect is a bias against acknowledging the achievements of women scientists whose work is attributed to their male colleagues This phenomenon was first described by suffragist and abolitionist Matilda Joslyn Gage 1826 98 in her essay Woman as Inventor first published as a tract in 1870 and in the North American Review in 1883 The term Matilda effect was coined in 1993 by science historian Margaret W Rossiter 1 2 Matilda effect Rossiter provides several examples of this effect Trotula Trota of Salerno a 12th century Italian woman physician wrote books which after her death were attributed to male authors Nineteenth and twentieth century cases illustrating the Matilda effect include those of Nettie Stevens 3 Lise Meitner Marietta Blau Rosalind Franklin and Jocelyn Bell Burnell The Matilda effect was compared to the Matthew effect whereby an eminent scientist often gets more credit than a comparatively unknown researcher even if their work is shared or similar 4 5 Contents 1 Research 2 Examples 3 No more Matildas 4 Other 5 See also 6 ReferencesResearch EditIn 2012 two female researchers from Radboud University Nijmegen showed that in the Netherlands the sex of professorship candidates influences the evaluation made of them 6 Similar cases are described by two Italian female researchers in a study 7 corroborated further by a Spanish study 8 On the other hand several studies found no difference between citations and impact of publications of male authors and those of female authors 9 10 11 Swiss researchers have indicated that mass media ask male scientists more often to contribute on shows than they do their female fellow scientists 12 According to one U S study although overt gender discrimination generally continues to decline in American society women continue to be disadvantaged with respect to the receipt of scientific awards and prizes particularly for research 13 Examples EditExamples of women subjected to the Matilda effect Theano of Crotone 6th century BCE early philosopher who did work in mathematics but most of her work was overshadowed by or attributed to her husband father or teacher depending on the source 14 Pythagoras 15 Trotula Trota of Salerno 12th century Italian physician author of works which after her death were attributed to male authors Hostility toward women as teachers and healers led to denial of her very existence At first her work was credited to her husband and son but as information got passed on monks confused her name for that of a man She is not mentioned in the Dictionary of Scientific Biography 16 Jeanne Baret 1740 1807 French botanist first woman to have completed a circumnavigation of the globe Partner and collaborator of the botanist Philibert Commerson she joined the expedition of Louis Antoine de Bougainville disguised as a man They collected the first specimens of Bougainvillea Most botanical discoveries have been attributed to Commerson alone after whom about a hundred of species have been named She was immortalized for the first much later with the description of Solanum baretiae es 17 in 2012 Nettie Stevens 1861 1912 discoverer of the XY sex determination system Her crucial studies of mealworms revealed for the first time that an organism s sex is determined by its chromosomes rather than by environmental or other factors Stevens greatly influenced the scientific community s transition to this new line of inquiry Chromosomal sex determination 18 However Thomas Hunt Morgan a distinguished geneticist at the time is generally credited with this discovery 19 Despite her extensive work in the field of genetics Stevens contributions to Morgan s work are often disregarded 20 Mary Whiton Calkins 1863 1930 Harvard University discovered that stimuli that were paired with other vivid stimuli would be recalled more easily She also discovered that duration of exposure led to better recall These findings along with her paired associations method would later be used by G E Muller and E B Titchener without any credit being given to Calkins Gerty Cori 1896 1957 Nobel laureate biochemist worked for years as her husband s assistant despite having equal qualification as him for a professorial position Rosalind Franklin 1920 1958 now recognized as an important contributor to the 1953 discovery of DNA structure At the time of the discovery by Francis Crick and James Watson for which the two men received a 1962 Nobel Prize her work was not properly credited though Watson described the crucial importance of her contribution in his 1968 book The Double Helix Marthe Gautier born 1925 now recognized for her important role in the discovery of the chromosomal abnormality that causes Down syndrome a discovery previously attributed exclusively to Jerome Lejeune Marian Diamond 1926 2017 working at the University of California Berkeley experimentally discovered the phenomenon of brain plasticity which ran contrary to previous neurological dogma When her seminal 1964 paper 21 was about to be published she discovered that the names of her two secondary co authors David Krech and Mark Rosenzweig had been placed before her name which additionally had been placed in parentheses She protested that she had done the essential work described in the paper and her name was then put in first place without parentheses The incident is described in a 2016 documentary film My Love Affair with the Brain The Life and Science of Dr Marian Diamond 22 Harriet Zuckerman born 1937 Zuckerman supplied core data for her husband R K Merton s famous concept of the Matthew effect which denotes the phenomenon where scientists of higher renown will typically gain substantially more credit and status from their work than their lesser known peers In the initial 1968 publication on the concept her role was diminished to a series of endnotes rather than a co authorship which Merton later acknowledged as a mistake in subsequent versions of the article 23 24 Programmers of ENIAC dedicated 1946 several women made substantial contributions to the project including Adele Goldstine Kay McNulty Betty Jennings Betty Snyder Marlyn Wescoff Fran Bilas and Ruth Lichterman but histories of ENIAC have typically not addressed these contributions and have at times focused on hardware accomplishments rather than software accomplishments 25 Examples of men scientists favored over women scientists for Nobel Prizes In 1934 the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to George Whipple George Richards Minot and William P Murphy They felt their female co worker Frieda Robscheit Robbins was excluded on grounds of her sex Whipple however shared the prize money with her as he felt she deserved the Nobel as well since she was co author of almost all of Whipple s publications In 1944 the Nobel Prize in Chemistry was given to Otto Hahn as the sole recipient Lise Meitner had worked with Hahn and had laid the theoretical foundations for nuclear fission she coined the term nuclear fission Meitner was not recognized by the Nobel Prize Committee partly due to her gender and partly due to her persecuted Jewish identity in Nazi Germany She was affected by the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service which prohibited Jews from holding government related positions including in research Initially her Austrian citizenship shielded her from persecution but she fled Germany after Hitler s annexation of Austria in 1938 26 In 1950 Cecil Powell received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his development of the photographic method of studying nuclear processes and for the resulting discovery of the pion pi meson Marietta Blau did pioneering work in this field Erwin Schrodinger had nominated her for the prize along with Hertha Wambacher but both were excluded 27 In 1956 two American physicists Tsung Dao Lee and Chen Ning Yang predicted the violation of the parity law in weak interactions and suggested a possible experiment to verify it In 1957 Chien Shiung Wu performed the necessary experiment in collaboration with National Institute of Standards and Technology and showed the parity violation in the case of beta decay 28 The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1957 was awarded to the male physicists and Wu was omitted She was the first to receive the Wolf Prize in Physics in 1978 in recognition for her work 29 In 1958 Joshua Lederberg shared a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with George Beadle and Edward Tatum Microbiologists Joshua Lederberg and his wife Esther Lederberg along with Beadle and Tatum developed replica plating a method of transferring bacterial colonies from one petri dish to another which is vital to current understanding of antibiotic resistance 19 However Esther Lederberg was not recognized for her vital work on this research project her contribution was paramount to the successful implementation of the theory 30 Furthermore she did not receive recognition for her discovery of the lambda phage or for her studies on the F fertility factor that created a foundation for future genetic and bacterial research 19 31 In the late 1960s Jocelyn Bell born 1943 discovered the first radio pulsar For this discovery in 1974 a Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to her supervisor Antony Hewish and to Martin Ryle citing Hewish and Ryle for their pioneering work in radio astrophysics Jocelyn Burnell was left out At the time of her discovery she was a Ph D student She felt the intellectual effort had been mostly her supervisor s but her omission from the Nobel Prize was criticized by several prominent astronomers including Fred Hoyle No more Matildas EditThe Spanish Association of Women Researchers and Technologists AMIT has created a movement called No more Matildas that honours Matilda Joslyn Gage 32 The campaign s goal is to promote the number of women in science from an early age eliminating stereotypes Other EditBen Barres 1954 2017 was a neurobiologist at Stanford University Medical School who transitioned from female to male He spoke of his scientific achievements having been perceived differently depending on what sex others thought he was at the time 33 Prior to his transition to male Barres scientific achievements were ascribed to men or devalued but after transitioning to male his achievements were credited to him and lauded See also EditHistory of science History of technology Logology science of science Matthew effect Sociology of science Women in science Timeline of women in scienceReferences Edit Rossiter Margaret W 1993 The Matthew Matilda effect in science Social Studies of Science London UK 23 2 325 341 doi 10 1177 030631293023002004 ISSN 0306 3127 S2CID 145225097 Flegal Katherine M 21 August 2022 A female career in research Annual Review of Nutrition 42 1 annurev nutr 062220 103411 doi 10 1146 annurev nutr 062220 103411 ISSN 0199 9885 PMID 35363538 S2CID 247866328 Retrieved 22 April 2022 Resnick Brian 7 July 2016 Nettie Stevens discovered XY sex chromosomes She didn t get credit because she had two X s Vox Retrieved 7 July 2016 Rossiter Margaret W 1993 The Matthew Matilda Effect in Science Social Studies of Science Vol 23 no 2 pp 325 341 ISSN 0306 3127 JSTOR 285482 Dominus Susan October 2019 Women scientists were written out of history It s Margaret Rossiter s lifelong mission to fix that Smithsonian Magazine Vol 50 no 6 p 48 van den Brink Marieke Benschop Yvonne 2011 Gender practices in the construction of academic excellence Sheep with five legs Organization 19 4 507 524 doi 10 1177 1350508411414293 S2CID 140512614 Andrea Cerroni Zenia Simonella 2012 Ethos and symbolic violence among women of science An empirical study Social Science Information 51 2 165 182 doi 10 1177 0539018412437102 hdl 10281 30675 S2CID 7176626 Jimenez Rodrigo Maria Luisa Martinez Morante Emilia Garcia Calvente Maria del Mar Alvarez Dardet Carlos 2008 Through gender parity in scientific publications Journal of Epidemiology amp Community Health 62 6 474 475 doi 10 1136 jech 2008 074294 hdl 10045 8447 PMID 18477742 S2CID 12399729 Hegarty Peter Walton Zoe 2012 The Consequences of Predicting Scientific Impact in Psychology Using Journal Impact Factors PDF Perspectives on Psychological Science 7 1 72 78 doi 10 1177 1745691611429356 PMID 26168426 S2CID 25605006 Baldi Stephane 1998 Normative versus social constructivist Processes in the allocation of citations A Network Analytic Model American Sociological Review 63 6 829 846 doi 10 2307 2657504 JSTOR 2657504 Haslam Nick Ban Lauren Kaufmann Leah Loughnan Stephen Peters Kim Whelan Jennifer Wilson Sam 2008 What makes an article influential Predicting impact in social and personality psychology Scientometrics 76 1 169 185 doi 10 1007 s11192 007 1892 8 S2CID 5648498 von Roten Fabienne Crettaz 2011 Gender differences in scientists public outreach and engagement activities Science Communication 33 1 52 75 doi 10 1177 1075547010378658 S2CID 220675370 Lincoln Anne E Pincus Stephanie Koster Janet Bandows Leboy Phoebe S 2012 The Matilda effect in science Awards and prizes in the US 1990s and 2000s Social Studies of Science 42 2 307 320 doi 10 1177 0306312711435830 PMID 22849001 S2CID 24673577 Crotone Theano of History of Scientific Women Biographies of Women Mathematicians agnesscott edu Decatur GA Agnes Scott College Rossiter Margaret W 1993 The Matthew Matilda effect in science Social Studies of Science 23 2 325 341 doi 10 1177 030631293023002004 JSTOR 285482 S2CID 145225097 Tepe E Ridley G Bohs L 2012 A new species of Solanum named for Jeanne Baret an overlooked contributor to the history of botany PhytoKeys 8 37 47 doi 10 3897 phytokeys 8 2101 PMC 3254248 PMID 22287929 Hagen Joel 1996 Doing Biology Glenview IL Harper Collins pp 37 46 a b c 6 Women scientists who were snubbed due to sexism Washington DC National Geographic Society 19 May 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2015 Nettie Maria Stevens 1861 1912 embryo asu edu The Embryo Project Encyclopedia Tempe AZ Arizona State University Retrieved 4 October 2015 Diamond Marian C Krech David Rosenzweig Mark R 1964 The effects of an enriched environment on the histology of the rat cerebral cortex The Journal of Comparative Neurology 123 111 119 doi 10 1002 cne 901230110 PMID 14199261 S2CID 30997263 Luna Productions lunaproductions com Merton R K The Matthew effect in science The reward and communication systems of science are considered PDF Garfield Library University of Pennsylvania Retrieved 24 November 2022 Merton R K The Matthew effect in science II Cumulative advantage and the symbolism of intellectual property PDF Garfield Library University of Pennsylvania Retrieved 4 May 2019 Light Jennifer S 1999 When computers were women PDF Technology and Culture 40 3 455 483 doi 10 1353 tech 1999 0128 S2CID 108407884 Marshak R E Wiesner E Settle F Jr 14 April 2013 29 July 1960 July 2001 Discovery of nuclear fission Science Week On elementary particles in physics reprint ed Archived from the original on 14 April 2013 Retrieved 10 October 2015 Sime Ruth Lewin 2012 Marietta Blau in the history of cosmic rays Physics Today Vol 65 no 10 p 8 Bibcode 2012PhT 65j 8S doi 10 1063 PT 3 1728 Wu C S Ambler E Hayward R W Hoppes D D Hudson R P 1957 Experimental Test of Parity Conservation in Beta Decay Physical Review 105 4 1413 1415 Bibcode 1957PhRv 105 1413W doi 10 1103 PhysRev 105 1413 Chien Shiung Wu Press release Wolf Prize Laureate in Physics 1978 Wolf Fund 9 December 2018 for her persistent and successful exploration of the weak interaction which helped establish the precise form and the non conservation of parity for this new natural force CensorshipIndex www esthermlederberg com Retrieved 10 October 2015 Esther Lederberg pioneer in genetics dies at 83 obituary Stanford University 29 November 2006 Retrieved 10 October 2015 No more Matildas the new AMIT awareness campaign 25 March 2021 Retrieved 27 June 2022 Vedantam Shankar 12 July 2006 Male scientist writes of life as female scientist Biologist who underwent sex change describes biases against women The Washington Post Washington DC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Matilda effect amp oldid 1123589181, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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