A few highlights:
59.7% of respondents felt that participation in press conferences impacted their career in a positive way. Women were more likely than men to feel this way, and those from small academic institutions were significantly more likely to feel this way.
Around 35% of respondents who identified as women had participated in more than one press conference while over 48% of men could say the same.
Respondents report that the ‘Dual Anonymous’ method has been shown to increase the participation, and thus the representation, of women.
Figure 6 in Bagdon et al. (2021). |
Figure 22 (left) and Figure 23 (right) in Bagdon et al. (2021). |
The most important sentence (in my opinion) is this one from the Recommendations section: ‘This study has…demonstrated that press conference participation is broadly representative of AAS membership and that this participation can positively impact a career.’ That alone should prompt more people to step forward to participate in press conferences.
...when reaching out to PIOs for recommendations, it’d be worthwhile to encourage them to do the same, i.e., to focus on the abstracts and not the authors when looking for newsworthy results to highlight. I suspect if you were to look at the people who’ve participated in multiple press conferences over the years, you’d find that they are more likely than average to have worked with a PIO. In my experience, PIOs often recommend the same people repeatedly.
Figure 9 in Bagdon et al. (2021). |
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