How can we make conferences more inclusive? Lessons from the International Ethological Congress

Rebecca Shuhua Chen, Tuba Rizvi, Ane Liv Berthelsen, Anneke J. Paijmans, Avery L. Maune, Barbara A. Caspers, Bernice Sepers, Isabel Damas-Moreira, Isabel Schnülle, Jana Könker, Joseph Hoffman, Joelyn de Lima, Jonas Tebbe, Kai-Philipp Gladow, Lisa de Vries, Marc Gilles, Nadine Schubert, Nayden Chakarov, Peter Korsten, Petroula BotsidouSabine Kraus, Stephen M. Salazar, Svenja Stöhr, Wolfgang Jockusch, Öncü Maraci

Research output: Working paper

Abstract

Despite growing awareness of the importance of researcher diversity, barriers to inclusion and equity persist in science and at academic conferences. As hosts of the 37th International Ethological Congress, “Behaviour 2023”, we studied equity, diversity and inclusivity (EDI) issues using observational and experimental behavioural data collected during question and answer (Q&A) sessions in addition to surveys conducted before and after the congress. Perceived women asked fewer questions than perceived men because they raised their hands less often to ask questions, and not because they were chosen less often by the session host. Self-reports indicated that women felt more comfortable asking questions when their own gender was represented (in the audience, by the speaker, and/or by the host) and when the setting was smaller. However, this pattern was not reflected in the observational data as perceived women asked fewer questions regardless of the situation. We report potential reasons why women asked fewer questions using survey data, and experimentally tested whether we could reduce gender disparity in question-asking. Our results indicate that session hosts cannot mitigate the gender disparity in question-asking by actively selecting women to start the Q&A session. We addressed further inclusivity barriers of underrepresented minorities beyond gender in a post-congress survey, which showed that underrepresented minorities did not have a more positive or negative congress experience but did perceive EDI issues as more severe. We conclude by providing recommendations for organising more inclusive scientific events, such as (i) ensuring that people who are less likely to ask questions do not miss out on academic opportunities, (ii) organising topic-, language-, and/or career-stage specific discussions and (iii) utilising technology to make presenting and listening smooth for everyone.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherEcoEvoRxiv
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Sept 2024

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'How can we make conferences more inclusive? Lessons from the International Ethological Congress'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this