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From: "Londa Schiebinger" <schieb@stanford.edu>
To: "genderedinnovations@lists.stanford.edu" <genderedinnovations@lists.stanford.edu>;
Cc:
Sent: 2024-11-01 (금) 00:40:08 (UTC+09:00)
Subject: [Gendered Innovations] Research and Gendered Innovations at the Tokyo Forum in November

The Research Gender Gap and its Impact on Female Health and Athletic Performance
C Lingam-Willgoss - Optimising Female Athletic Performance, 2024
The prevalence and representation of women in elite sport has increased
significantly in recent years, with representation at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
seeing near parity in terms of events and medals available to females, with female …

Female-led teams produce more innovative ideas yet receive less scientific impact
AJ Yang, Y Ding, M Liu - Quantitative Science Studies, 2024
Despite longstanding concerns about gender bias in science, there remains a lack
of understanding regarding the performance of female scientists as team leaders
compared to their male counterparts. This study explores differences between female-led …

Understanding the relationship between team diversity and the innovative performance in research teams using decision tree algorithms: evidence from artificial …
J Liu, X Gong, S Xu, C Huang - Scientometrics, 2024
Interdisciplinary research teams are crucial in solving complex problems by
providing creative solutions that single-discipline teams cannot achieve. Despite
considerable research has been conducted to enhance the efficacy of …

TOKYO FORUM 2024 Shaping the Future
Are you familiar with the term "Gendered Innovations (GI)?
The objects we use in our daily lives and the ideas we take for granted are often shaped by biases. If we can become aware of these biases, the world could take a step in a better direction.
On Day 1 of this year's Tokyo Forum, we will feature a session titled "Gendered Innovations Shaping the Future", in which the speakers of expertise will explore the importance of GI and its impact on science and technology. With key contributions from GI pioneer Professor Londa
Schiebinger, along with experts from South Korea, Japan, and Editor-in-Chief of Nature, the session will explore the future of science shaped by GI, focusing on the need for research evaluation and gender education in STEM fields.

 



At this year’s Tokyo Forum, a diverse group of people—researchers, artists, entrepreneurs, and students—will come together across disciplines and generations to explore and discuss the transformative power of “design” in shaping our future.

OKI SayakaModerator
Professor, UTokyo IncluDE (Center for Coproduction of Inclusion, Diversity and Equity) / Graduate School of Education, the University of Tokyo
Londa SCHIEBINGER

John L. Hinds Professor of History of Science, Stanford University
LEE Heisook
President, GISTeR
Magdalena SKIPPER
Editor-in-Chief, Nature
AIHARA Hiroaki
Executive Vice President, the University of Tokyo


All best, Londa 
Londa Schiebinger
Director, EU/US Gendered Innovations in Science, Health & Medicine, Engineering, and Environment Project
http://genderedinnovations.stanford.edu
John L. Hinds Professor of History of Science, Stanford University
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/HPST/schiebinger.html

 

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