Matilda effect

bias against acknowledging the achievements of those women scientists
(Redirected from Matilda Effect)

The Matilda effect is a type of bias. The Matilda effect is when a woman scientist does something but people think a man scientist did it. Sometimes people do this on purpose, for example when a professor steals a female student's research and puts his own name on the paper. Sometimes people do this without thinking about it.

Matilda effect

History

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Suffragist and abolitionist Matilda Joslyn Gage (1826–98) was the first person to write about this effect. She wrote an essay, "Woman as Inventor." It was first published as a tract in 1870 and in the North American Review in 1883. The term "Matilda effect" was started in 1993 by science historian Margaret W. Rossiter.[1] Rossiter wrote about several times the Matilda effect had happened in real life. Trotula (Trota of Salerno), a 12th-century Italian woman physician, wrote books which, after her death, were rewritten with male authors' names on them. Nineteenth- and twentieth-century cases of the Matilda effect include those of Nettie Stevens,[2] Lise Meitner, Marietta Blau, Rosalind Franklin, and Jocelyn Bell Burnell.

Comparison

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The Matilda effect was compared to the Matthew effect. The Matthew effect is when a famous scientist gets more credit than a less famous scientist even if they both did the same work.[3][4]

Research

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In 2012, two woman researchers from Radboud University Nijmegen did a study. They looked at men and women who were being picked to be professors at universities. They found the people choosing who would become a professor were affected by whether the person they were looking at was a man or a woman.[5] Another study in Italy Italian and another in Spain showed the same thing.[6][7] Some other studies found no difference between the number of times men and woman researchers' papers had been named as sources in other papers.[8][9][10]

Swiss researchers found that when people in mass media, for example newscasters, want to put a scientist on their show, they talk to male scientists more than to female scientists.[11]

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."[12]

Examples

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Examples of women to whom to the Matilda effect happened:

  • Theano of Crotone, (6th century BC) - early philosopher who did work in mathematics, but people thought her husband, father, or teacher had done all the work (depending on the source)[13] Pythagoras[14]
  • Trotula (Trota of Salerno, 12th century) – Italian physician, author of works which, after her death, people said had really been written by men. Some people were so against women being teachers and healers that they said Trotula had never really lived. At first, people said her husband and son wrote her work, but later, monks confused her name with that of a man. She is not in the "Dictionary of Scientific Biography"[15]
  • Jeanne Baret (1740–1807) – French botanist, first woman to have traveled all the way around Planet Earth. 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 plants. 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][16] in 2012.
  • Nettie Stevens (1861–1912) – Discoverer of how chromosomes make living things male and female. Her studies of mealworms showed for the first time that a living thing's sex is caused by its chromosomes and not by its environment. Stevens greatly influenced the scientific community's transition to this new idea: chromosomal sex determination.[17] However, Thomas Hunt Morgan, a distinguished geneticist at the time, is generally credited with this discovery.[18] Even though she did a great deal of work in genetics, Stevens' contributions to Morgan's work are often disregarded.[19]
  • Mary Whiton Calkins (1863–1930) – Harvard University Discovered that stimuli that were given to a test subject at the same time as other stimuli would be easier for that person or animal to remember. She also found that subjects remembered things better if they saw or otherwise experienced them for a longer time. Georg Elias Müller and Edward B. Titchener used Calkins' research findings for their own work without giving her any credit.
  • Gerty Cori (1896–1957) – Nobel-laureate biochemist, worked for years as her husband's assistant, even though they were both equally qualified for the job.
  • Rosalind Franklin (1920–58) – Now recognized as an important part of the 1953 discovery of DNA structure. Francis Crick and James Watson both won the 1962 Nobel Prize, and they did not tell people how they had used Franklin's research findings to help their own work. In 1968, Watson talked about how important Franklin was in his book The Double Helix).
  • Marthe Gautier (born 1925) – She helped discover that Down syndrome is caused by a problem with the 21st chromosome. People used to think Jérôme Lejeune did it alone.
  • Marian Diamond (born 1926) – Working at the University of California, Berkeley, discovered brain plasticity. Before that, scientists thought the brain was not plastic. When her 1964 paper[20] was about to be published, she saw that the names of her two secondary teammates, David Krech and Mark Rosenzweig, had been placed before her name, and her name was only there 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. This problem is in a 2016 documentary film, My Love Affair with the Brain: The Life and Science of Dr. Marian Diamond.[21]
  • Harriet Zuckerman (born 1937) – Zuckerman was also credited by husband Robert K. Merton as co-author of the concept of the Matthew effect.[22]
  • Programmers of ENIAC (dedicated 1946) – Several women did large parts of this project: Adele Goldstine, Kay McNulty, Betty Jennings, Betty Snyder, Marlyn Wescoff, Fran Bilas and Ruth Lichterman, but most histories of ENIAC have not talked about what they did. Instead, they focus on hardware accomplishments rather than software accomplishments.[23]

Times men scientists had Nobel Prizes when women scientists did not:

Ben Barres (1954–2017), a neurobiologist at Stanford University Medical School. Barres is a trans man, meaning Barres was raised with a female gender role. He began to live as a man when he was 42 years old. Barres said people thought his research was better when they thought he was a man than when they thought he was a woman. Someone even said "His work is much better that his sister's" because they thought "Barbara Barres" was his sister and not his own old name.[29] This is one time when the Matilda effect worked on the same person at different times in that person's life.

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References

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  1. Rossiter Margaret W. (1993), "The Matthew/Matilda Effect in Science", Social Studies of Science, 23 (2), London: 325–341, doi:10.1177/030631293023002004, ISSN 0306-3127, S2CID 145225097
  2. Resnick, Brian (2016-07-07). "Nettie Stevens discovered XY sex chromosomes. She didn't get credit because she had two X's". Vox. Retrieved 2016-07-07.
  3. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. Marieke van den Brink; Yvonne Benschop (2011), "Gender practices in the construction of academic excellence: Sheep with five legs", Organization, 19 (4): 507–524, doi:10.1177/1350508411414293, S2CID 140512614
  6. 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
  7. María Luisa Jiménez-Rodrigo1; Emilia Martínez-Morante; María del Mar García-Calvente; Carlos Álvarez-Dardet (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{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. Peter Hegarty; Zoe Walton (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
  9. Stephane Baldi (1998), "Normative versus Social Constructivist Processes in the Allocation of Citations: A Network-Analytic Model", American Sociological Review, 63 (6): 829–846, JSTOR 2657504
  10. Nick Haslam; Lauren Ban; Leah Kaufmann; Stephen Loughnan; Kim Peters; Jennifer Whelan; Sam Wilson (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
  11. Fabienne Crettaz von Roten (2011), "Gender Differences in Scientists' Public Outreach and Engagement Activities", Science Communication, 33 (1): 52–75, doi:10.1177/1075547010378658, S2CID 220675370
  12. Anne E. Lincoln; Stephanie Pincus; Janet Bandows Koster; Phoebe S. Leboy (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
  13. History of Scientific Women https://scientificwomen.net/women/crotone-theano_of-90
  14. Biographies of Women Mathematicians https://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/theano.htm
  15. 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.
  16. 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. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.8.2101
  17. Hagen, Joel (1996). Doing Biology. Glenview, IL: Harper Collins. pp. 37–46.
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 "6 Women Scientists Who Were Snubbed Due to Sexism". 19 May 2013. Retrieved 2015-10-04.
  19. "Nettie Maria Stevens (1861–1912) | The Embryo Project Encyclopedia". embryo.asu.edu. Retrieved 2015-10-04.
  20. 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.
  21. "Luna Productions". lunaproductions.com.
  22. "The Matthew Effect in Science, II : Cumulative Advantage and the Symbolism of Intellectual Property by Robert K. Merton" (PDF). Retrieved 2019-05-04.
  23. Light, Jennifer S. (1999). "When Computers Were Women" (PDF). Technology and Culture. 40 (3): 455–483. doi:10.1353/tech.1999.0128. S2CID 108407884.
  24. "ScienceWeek". 2013-04-14. Archived from the original on April 14, 2013. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  25. Sime, Ruth Lewin (2012). "Marietta Blau in the history of cosmic rays". Physics Today. 65 (10): 8. Bibcode:2012PhT....65j...8S. doi:10.1063/PT.3.1728.
  26. "Wolf prize goes to particle theorists". Physics World. 20 January 2004.
  27. "CensorshipIndex". www.esthermlederberg.com. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  28. "Esther Lederberg, pioneer in genetics, dies at 83". Stanford University. 29 November 2006. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  29. Shankar Vedantam (July 13, 2006). "Male Scientist Writes of Life as Female Scientist: Biologist Who Underwent Sex Change Describes Biases Against Women". Washington Post. Retrieved July 15, 2021.