The sex gap in sports and exercise medicine research: who does research on females?
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2023Metadata
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Laxdal, A. G. (2023). The sex gap in sports and exercise medicine research: who does research on females? Scientometrics, 128 (3), 1987-1994. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-023-04641-5Abstract
Females are underrepresented in sports and exercise medicine research, both as authors and as research participants. The aim of this study was therefore to explore who does sports and exercise medicine research on females. All original research articles with female-only samples published in six major sports and exercise medicine journals over a 7-year period (2014–2020; n=334) were examined. Out of the 2027 authors of the articles in question, 1149 were categorized as male (56.7%) and 850 were categorized as female (41.9%; 28 [1.4%] could not be categorized). A slight majority of the articles had a female as frst author (51.5%), while the majority of the last authors were male (62.3%). Binomial tests of proportions revealed that females were overrepresented in all author roles in this sample compared to the feld at large, while chi-square tests of proportions indicated minimal variations in female authorship across the studied period. These fndings indicate that females are relatively more likely to do research on females than m