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Women scientists promote their research online less often than men, study finds

Fewer women amplify their scientific voices online
Illustration of our study process. Credit: Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-60590-y

Many women scientists are staying silent online—and it could be costing them professionally. A new University of Michigan study finds that women are about 28% less likely than men to promote their scientific papers on X (formerly Twitter)—a seemingly minor digital decision that could have big implications for professional advancement, recognition and pay.

The study controlled for key factors such as research field, institutional affiliation and and still found a persistent, wide gender gap. Surprisingly, the gap holds strong even in disciplines where is more equitable and overt bias is expected to be lower, the researchers say.

Even more striking: The gap widens as women climb the ladder.

The scientists least likely to promote their work? High-performing women from elite institutions publishing in top-tier journals—the very researchers who have the most to gain from increased visibility.

"This isn't just about tweets. It's about who gets seen, cited and celebrated in science," said study co-author Daniel Romero, associate professor of information, , and and computer science.

The gender gap increases with higher performance and status, being most pronounced for productive women from top-ranked institutions who publish papers in high-impact journals.

Romero and colleagues examined scholarly self-promotion over six years using 23 million tweets about 2.8 million research papers authored by 3.5 million scientists. The work is in the journal Nature Communications.

The findings raised concerns about the dominant norms of academic social media, which often reward traditionally masculine styles of self-presentation—potentially deterring women from engaging at all. Universities, and hiring committees should consider the hidden costs of leaning on engagement metrics, the researchers said.

"Since visibility metrics, such as citations and media mentions, play a role in hiring and promotion decisions, recognizing that these metrics may be influenced by self-promotion disparities can encourage institutions to develop strategies to reduce the barriers contributing to these differences," said study co-author Misha Teplitskiy, U-M associate professor of information.

More information: Hao Peng et al, The gender gap in scholarly self-promotion on social media, Nature Communications (2025).

Journal information: Nature Communications

Citation: Women scientists promote their research online less often than men, study finds (2025, July 7) retrieved 19 July 2025 from /news/2025-07-women-scientists-online-men.html
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