AI Article Synopsis

  • Disparities for women and minorities in STEM persist despite evidence that diverse teams perform better, leading to the creation of the Diversity and Science Lecture series.
  • This platform showcases junior life scientists discussing their research while emphasizing diversity, equity, and inclusion topics, revealing that most speakers focus on interpersonal support and race/ethnicity issues.
  • The study also highlights less common but important discussions around sexual and gender identities, showing how overlapping identities can shape individual experiences and priorities in STEM, with the goal of enhancing understanding of speaker diversity.

Article Abstract

Disparities for women and minorities in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) careers have continued even amidst mounting evidence for the superior performance of diverse workforces. In response, we launched the Diversity and Science Lecture series, a cross-institutional platform where junior life scientists present their research and comment on diversity, equity, and inclusion in STEM. We characterize speaker representation from 79 profiles and investigate topic noteworthiness via quantitative content analysis of talk transcripts. Nearly every speaker discussed interpersonal support, and three-fifths of speakers commented on race or ethnicity. Other topics, such as sexual and gender minority identity, were less frequently addressed but highly salient to the speakers who mentioned them. We found that significantly co-occurring topics reflected not only conceptual similarity, such as terms for racial identities, but also intersectional significance, such as identifying as a Latina/Hispanic woman or Asian immigrant, and interactions between concerns and identities, including the heightened value of friendship to the LGBTQ community, which we reproduce using transcripts from an independent seminar series. Our approach to scholar profiles and talk transcripts serves as an example for transmuting hundreds of hours of scholarly discourse into rich datasets that can power computational audits of speaker diversity and illuminate speakers' personal and professional priorities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10621980PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0293322PLOS

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