Archive for October, 2007

Tim Berners-Lee calls for end to “stupid” male geek culture

Monday, October 8th, 2007

From a ZDNet.co.uk article by Tom Espiner (via our friend Rohit):

The inventor of the world wide web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, has called for an end to the “stupid” male geek culture that disregards the work of capable female engineers, and puts others off entering the profession.

Berners-Lee said that a culture that avoided alienating women would attract more female programmers, which could lead to greater harmony of systems design. “If there were more women involved we could move towards interoperability. We have to change at every level,” he said.

According to Berners-Lee, a culture exists where women can be put off a career in technology both by “stupid” behaviour by some male “geeks”, and by the reactions of other women.

“It’s a complex problem — we find bias against women by women. There are bits of male geek culture and engineer culture that are stupid. They should realise that they could be alienating people who are smarter and better engineers,” said Berners-Lee.

Engineering research facilities that interview candidates based only on how many papers they have had published also risk adding to the problem, according to Berners-Lee, because of an apparent in-built bias against women.

One academic went through a sex change, submitted the same papers under both identities, and found that papers were accepted from a man but were rejected when they came from a woman, said the web inventor. This bias is unaccountable, but adds to institutional bias, he said.

More women physicists will *eventually* mean more Nobel prizewinners.

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

Why don’t more women win the Nobel Prize in Physics? Wait twenty years, suggests one juror. Committee member Borje Johansson delivered a lecture on “How to Get a Nobel Prize.” And the topic of women came up:

Why there are few women in the list of Nobel physics laureates? Johansson said that there was usually a time lag of about 20 years between a discovery or invention and the recognition with a Nobel. “So, the awards now reflect the field of physics 20 years ago. With the number of women physicists increasing, this fact (of a handful women Nobel laureates) may change two decades from now,” he stated.

He also said a surefire way to win is to be related to a Nobel Prize winner (as in the case of Marie Curie, who won with her husband, and whose daughter also won a Nobel with her own husband.) And he pointed out that Indian physicist S.N. Bose never got a Nobel for his work on quantum mechanics in the 1920s, but Nobel prizes have gone to people who based their work on Bose’s.

In other words, the Nobel committee is just a tad slow sometimes…