Gender Equality Paradox GenderSci Lab Gender Equality Paradox GenderSci Lab

Gender Equality Paradox Monkey Business: Or, How to Tell Spurious Causal Stories about Nation-Level Achievement by Women in STEM

This post is an explainer and supplement to our Psychological Sciences Commentary. We discuss five key problems with data and inferences that we identified in Stoet and Geary’s study. In places it’s a bit of a wonky read, but we unpack some serious issues, including issues with replicating the findings, spurious correlations, study design, and the ecological fallacy.

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Gender Equality Paradox GenderSci Lab Gender Equality Paradox GenderSci Lab

The GenderSci Lab Takes On the Gender Equality Paradox Hypothesis: Introduction and Primer

Is the feminist project to bring about parity for women and men in traditionally male fields doomed? In this blog post series, we expand on these contributions and offer a thorough consideration of the “Gender Equality Paradox” hypothesis and its theoretical and methodological underpinnings and the assumptions required for it to operate.

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Sociogenomics GenderSci Lab Sociogenomics GenderSci Lab

Ethical Oversight of GWAS Studies: Are We Doing Enough to Protect Communities?

Does human sexuality have a genetic component? In an era of genomics that allows parents to select for traits such as the skin color or eye color of their baby, and of continued discrimination, imprisonment, and even death penalities for LGBTQ+ people globally, questions around the genetic determinacy of sexuality require close ethical consideration.

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Sociogenomics GenderSci Lab Sociogenomics GenderSci Lab

The GenderSci Lab’s Letter in Science: Context and Further Commentary on GWAS Studies of Same-Sex Sexuality

In a recent Science Letter, “Genome Studies Must Account for History”, and in this short blog series, the GenderSci Lab investigates the social and historical context of the biobank data used for a recent genetic study of same-sex sexuality, and explores the political and ethical implications of these projects.

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SABV GenderSci Lab SABV GenderSci Lab

Three Years In: “Sex as a Biological Variable” Policy in Practice - and an Invitation to Collaborate

In 2016 the NIH issued a policy requiring consideration of sex as a biological variable (SABV) in all NIH-funded preclinical research on vertebrate animals and human cells and tissues…three years later, what have been the impacts of the policy on scientific research?

To answer this question, this year I conducted in-person, semi-structured interviews with nine basic science researchers from three different laboratories on the East Coast of the United States that use animal and tissue models to study metabolic disease. I transcribed the full interviews and then conducted thematic analysis of the data using the NVivo software to help organize my coding.

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Q&A GenderSci Lab Q&A GenderSci Lab

Q&A with Heather Shattuck-Heidorn

Interview with GenderSci Lab Assistant Director Heather Shattuck-Heidorn, Newly-Appointed Assistant Professor of Women and Gender Studies at University of Southern Maine

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Q&A GenderSci Lab Q&A GenderSci Lab

Q&A with Meredith Reiches

Interview with GenderSci Lab Assistant Director Meredith Reiches, winner of the 2019 Catharine Stimpson Prize for Outstanding Feminist Scholarship

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Q&A GenderSci Lab Q&A GenderSci Lab

Q&A with Maayan Sudai

Interview with GenderSci Lab member Maayan Sudai, Assistant Professor of Law and of Women and Gender Studies at the University of Haifa

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