Bulgaria Slips 23 Spots in Global Gender Equality Ranking
Bulgaria has significantly dropped in the global ranking for gender equality in 2025
Women are less successful in receiving research funding than men if the selection process focusses on the scientist making the pitch rather than the science presented, according to new research released Friday, reports AFP.
In an edition of The Lancet medical journal dedicated entirely to gender issues in health and science, the paper showed that the gap between male and female success rates in grant acceptance grew when things got personal.
The experiment analysed nearly 24,000 grant applications over five years at the Canadian Institute of Health Research -- Canada's main public medical research funder.
In 2014 the body changed its application process, splitting funding reviews into two separate schemes -- one with an explicit focus on the applicant, the other evaluating the science.
In doing so, they created a "unique natural experiment", according to the authors of the study.
When assessments were based solely on the quality of the science, the gender gap between grants accepted was a mere 0.9 percentage points.
But when the assessments were based on an evaluation of the principal scientists pitching the project, the gap between male and female acceptances grew to 4 percent.
"This shows us that men and women proposed science is evaluated to be of similar quality, but men and women are not evaluated similarly as scientists," said Holly Witteman, associate professor at the Department of Family and Emergency Medicine at Laval University, Quebec.
Witteman said there may be a number of reasons behind this, including individual or systemic biases.
Whether consciously or unconsciously, reviewers may "tend to think as men being better scientists than women," she told AFP.
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