Yes, very interesting. I liked this section too:

"Telling women that their comments received more recommendations might also 
encourage them to comment more; previous studies have found that women are less 
likely than men to persist in commenting when their comments do not receive 
positive responses."

This is something we try to do during our editathons; show our participants how 
much their articles are read and appreciated. But we could do even better 
there, I believe.

Thanks for sharing!


Best wishes,

Lennart Guldbrandsson

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Jimmy Wales

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Date: Wed, 7 Jan 2015 01:29:25 +0000
Subject: [Gendergap] Study of 1 million NY Times comments




Thought this was interesting.

How to ge more women to join the debate
http://kristof.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/01/06/how-to-get-more-women-to-join-the-debate/?_r=2
 

>"Women were clearly underrepresented in my data. They made only a quarter
 of comments, even though their
>comments got more recommendations from 
other readers on average. Even when they did speak up, they
>tended to cluster
 in stereotypically “female” areas: they were most common on articles 
about parenting, caring
>for the old, fashion and dining. (Women got more
 recommendations than men on most of the sports blogs, but
>they still 
made, for example, only 5 percent of comments on the soccer blog.)"

>"It seems unlikely that these effects are confined to The New York Times; 
>studies of online commenting find
>broad signs of inequality. (While women are well-represented on some websites, 
>like the image-sharing site
>Pinterest,
 these sites do not tend to focus on expressing and defending opinions. 
Online forums that do often
>have mostly male commenters: examples 
include Wikipedia edit pages, the social news site Reddit, and the
>question-answering sites Quora and Stack Overflow.) I also spoke to Katherine 
>Coffman, an economist whose
>results echoed mine: she found that women were less willing than men to 
>contribute their ideas in stereotypically
>male areas.

Marie
                                          

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