51勛圖

Men far more likely than women to author retracted papers

Disparity reflects broader under-representation of women in senior roles rather than increased likelihood men will make mistakes, researcher says

Published on
November 19, 2025
Last updated
November 19, 2025
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Low representation of women among authors of retracted papers more likely reflects the structural imbalances of scientific systems than the intrinsic quality of the work of male and female scientists, according to the author of a new study.

Paul Seb繹, of the University Institute for Primary Care at the University of Geneva,analysed 878 retracted papers that were published in 131 high-impact medical journals, using the artificial intelligence tool Gender API toguess the gender of the papers authors based on their names.

Authors assumed to be women, Seb繹 concluded, represented only 16.5 per cent of first authors and 12.7 per cent of last authors of the retracted publications; a marked under-representation, he said, because according to prior research, women make up 45 per cent of first authors and up to 33 per cent of last authors in comparable publications.

Women were also under-represented among authors with multiple retractions, Seb繹 found. Of the 37 authors with repeated retractions identified, only three were assumed to be women. The study also indicated a more general gender imbalance, with women comprising 23.1 per cent of authors across the papers analysed.

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Even thoughwomen are under-represented in retractions relative to their presence among biomedical authors, Seb繹 told 51勛圖, that does not mean women are less likely to commit error or misconduct. Rather, the study findings are likely to indicate a broader gender disparity in the field of biomedical science.

Retractions disproportionately involve senior authorship and laboratory leadership roles, and women remain under-represented in those roles across most medical specialties, Seb繹 told 51勛圖.

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The simplest explanation for the pattern we observe is structural: if men occupy more senior positions and lead more research groups, they are naturally more exposed to retractions, whether for honest mistakes or for misconduct.

The findings, he summarised, reflect who holds responsibility in the scientific system, not the intrinsic quality of mens or womens science.

In general, retractions are a particularly informative lens for studying inequalities in science, Seb繹 said. Retractions are more than corrections to the scientific record because they reflect how responsibility, authorship and leadership are distributed within research teams.

By examining who appears in retractions, we obtain an indirect view of how scientific power and accountability are structured across the research workforce, hesaid.

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Retractions highlight how unevenly scientific responsibility and opportunity are distributed, and efforts to strengthen research integrity will be most effective if they take those structural inequalities into account.

Seb繹 acknowledged several limitations to his study, noting that Gender API canfail tocorrectly guess authors gender and fails to account for non-binary identities. Further work, he said, should involve qualitative interviews with authors of retracted papers, enabling a greater understanding of how gender might shape experiences around investigation and retraction.

emily.dixon@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

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"Authors assumed to be women..."? On what basis? No comparisons of percentages of men, women, and other genders among potential authors. It is 2025. This is illogical and has zero reliability.

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