Where the Women Are: Gender Imbalance in Computing and Faculty Perceptions of Theoretical and Applied Research

Women remain under-represented in academic science, and this is especially true in computing. While there is limited research on gender differences in research focus, there is evidence that women may be more likely to conduct applied research. We surveyed tenured and tenure-track faculty in the Unit...

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Main Authors: Samantha Kleinberg, Jessecae K. Marsh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2025-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10975775/
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author Samantha Kleinberg
Jessecae K. Marsh
author_facet Samantha Kleinberg
Jessecae K. Marsh
author_sort Samantha Kleinberg
collection DOAJ
description Women remain under-represented in academic science, and this is especially true in computing. While there is limited research on gender differences in research focus, there is evidence that women may be more likely to conduct applied research. We surveyed tenured and tenure-track faculty in the United States to understand perceptions of hypothetical researchers who engage in applied or theoretical work. Faculty rated researchers engaged in applied research as less likely to publish their work, receive tenure/be promoted, obtain awards, and get funding for their work. Faculty further rated these researchers as less brilliant, creative, and technically skilled than they rated their theory-focused counterparts. Data from publications, hiring, funding, and awards suggests that applied research may indeed lead to worse career outcomes. We further show that women are more highly represented in applied research areas than theoretical ones. Negative perceptions of applied researchers must now be addressed to avoid exacerbating the gender gap.
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spelling doaj-art-16f4779aef734fb58037ffc321b0a3772025-08-20T03:49:18ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362025-01-0113735207352910.1109/ACCESS.2025.356417010975775Where the Women Are: Gender Imbalance in Computing and Faculty Perceptions of Theoretical and Applied ResearchSamantha Kleinberg0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6964-3272Jessecae K. Marsh1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-1151Computer Science Department, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, NJ, USAPsychology Department, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA, USAWomen remain under-represented in academic science, and this is especially true in computing. While there is limited research on gender differences in research focus, there is evidence that women may be more likely to conduct applied research. We surveyed tenured and tenure-track faculty in the United States to understand perceptions of hypothetical researchers who engage in applied or theoretical work. Faculty rated researchers engaged in applied research as less likely to publish their work, receive tenure/be promoted, obtain awards, and get funding for their work. Faculty further rated these researchers as less brilliant, creative, and technically skilled than they rated their theory-focused counterparts. Data from publications, hiring, funding, and awards suggests that applied research may indeed lead to worse career outcomes. We further show that women are more highly represented in applied research areas than theoretical ones. Negative perceptions of applied researchers must now be addressed to avoid exacerbating the gender gap.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10975775/Applied researchbasic researchcomputing educationgender
spellingShingle Samantha Kleinberg
Jessecae K. Marsh
Where the Women Are: Gender Imbalance in Computing and Faculty Perceptions of Theoretical and Applied Research
IEEE Access
Applied research
basic research
computing education
gender
title Where the Women Are: Gender Imbalance in Computing and Faculty Perceptions of Theoretical and Applied Research
title_full Where the Women Are: Gender Imbalance in Computing and Faculty Perceptions of Theoretical and Applied Research
title_fullStr Where the Women Are: Gender Imbalance in Computing and Faculty Perceptions of Theoretical and Applied Research
title_full_unstemmed Where the Women Are: Gender Imbalance in Computing and Faculty Perceptions of Theoretical and Applied Research
title_short Where the Women Are: Gender Imbalance in Computing and Faculty Perceptions of Theoretical and Applied Research
title_sort where the women are gender imbalance in computing and faculty perceptions of theoretical and applied research
topic Applied research
basic research
computing education
gender
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10975775/
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