Analysis of science journalism reveals disparities in coverage across predicted gender and ethnic identities
Science journalism is a critical way in which the public can remain informed and benefit from new scientific findings. Such journalism also shapes the public’s view of scientific findings and legitimizes experts. Those covering science can only cite and quote a limited number of sources. Sources may be identified by the journalist’s research or by recommendations by other scientists. In both cases, biases may influence who is identified and ultimately included as an expert.
To analyze possible biases in science journalism, we analyzed 22,001 non-research articles published by Nature. We chose to analyze Nature non-research articles since its research articles provide a natural comparator. Our analysis considered two possible sources of disparity: gender and name origin. To explore these sources of disparity, we extracted cited authors’ names as well as extracted names of quoted speakers. While citations and quotations within a piece do not reflect the entire information-gathering process, they can provide insight into the demographics of visible sources. We then used the extracted names to predict gender and name origin of the cited authors and speakers.
In order to appropriately quantify the level of difference, we must identify a suitable reference set for comparison. We chose first and last authors within primary research articles in Nature and a subset of Springer Nature articles in the same time period as our comparator. In our analysis, we found a skew towards quoting men in Nature science journalism-related articles. However, quotation is trending toward equal representation at a faster rate than first and last authorship in academic publishing. Interestingly, we found that the gender disparity in Nature quotes was column-dependent, with the "Career Features" column reaching gender parity. Our name origin analysis found a significant over-representation of names with predicted Celtic/English origin and under-representation of names with a predicted East Asian origin. This finding was observed both in extracted quotes and journal citations, but dampened in citations.
Manubot is a system for writing scholarly manuscripts via GitHub.
Manubot automates citations and references, versions manuscripts using git, and enables collaborative writing via GitHub.
An overview manuscript presents the benefits of collaborative writing with Manubot and its unique features.
The rootstock repository is a general purpose template for creating new Manubot instances, as detailed in SETUP.md
.
See USAGE.md
for documentation how to write a manuscript.
Please open an issue for questions related to Manubot usage, bug reports, or general inquiries.
The directories are as follows:
content
contains the manuscript source, which includes markdown files as well as inputs for citations and references. SeeUSAGE.md
for more information.output
contains the outputs (generated files) from Manubot including the resulting manuscripts. You should not edit these files manually, because they will get overwritten.webpage
is a directory meant to be rendered as a static webpage for viewing the HTML manuscript.build
contains commands and tools for building the manuscript.ci
contains files necessary for deployment via continuous integration.
The easiest way to run Manubot is to use continuous integration to rebuild the manuscript when the content changes.
If you want to build a Manubot manuscript locally, install the conda environment as described in build
.
Then, you can build the manuscript on POSIX systems by running the following commands from this root directory.
# Activate the manubot conda environment (assumes conda version >= 4.4)
conda activate manubot
# Build the manuscript, saving outputs to the output directory
bash build/build.sh
# At this point, the HTML & PDF outputs will have been created. The remaining
# commands are for serving the webpage to view the HTML manuscript locally.
# This is required to view local images in the HTML output.
# Configure the webpage directory
manubot webpage
# You can now open the manuscript webpage/index.html in a web browser.
# Alternatively, open a local webserver at http://localhost:8000/ with the
# following commands.
cd webpage
python -m http.server
Sometimes it's helpful to monitor the content directory and automatically rebuild the manuscript when a change is detected.
The following command, while running, will trigger both the build.sh
script and manubot webpage
command upon content changes:
bash build/autobuild.sh
Whenever a pull request is opened, CI (continuous integration) will test whether the changes break the build process to generate a formatted manuscript. The build process aims to detect common errors, such as invalid citations. If your pull request build fails, see the CI logs for the cause of failure and revise your pull request accordingly.
When a commit to the main
branch occurs (for example, when a pull request is merged), CI builds the manuscript and writes the results to the gh-pages
and output
branches.
The gh-pages
branch uses GitHub Pages to host the following URLs:
- HTML manuscript at https://manubot.github.io/rootstock/
- PDF manuscript at https://manubot.github.io/rootstock/manuscript.pdf
For continuous integration configuration details, see .github/workflows/manubot.yaml
.
Except when noted otherwise, the entirety of this repository is licensed under a CC BY 4.0 License (LICENSE.md
), which allows reuse with attribution.
Please attribute by linking to https://github.com/manubot/rootstock.
Since CC BY is not ideal for code and data, certain repository components are also released under the CC0 1.0 public domain dedication (LICENSE-CC0.md
).
All files matched by the following glob patterns are dual licensed under CC BY 4.0 and CC0 1.0:
*.sh
*.py
*.yml
/*.yaml
*.json
*.bib
*.tsv
.gitignore
All other files are only available under CC BY 4.0, including:
*.md
*.html
*.pdf
*.docx
Please open an issue for any question related to licensing.