About this Event
Prof. Karin Hoisl, Full Professor of Organization and Innovation at the University of Mannheim, will discuss how mentor gender impacts the evaluation of mentees' independent work.
As mentors, women and men are equally expected to advance their mentees' careers. However, in many contexts, women are still undervalued compared to men. This gender bias also applies to women mentors and may influence the evaluation of their mentees' independent work, i.e., work produced without their mentor. We explore two theoretical predictions regarding a relative evaluation discount for independent work produced by mentees of women versus men: the Matthew Effect and status characteristics theory, which differ significantly in their implications. Analyzing citations accruing to publications of comparable quality by scientists with prestigious early-career mentorship, we find a 13% citation discount for mentees of women compared to mentees of men. This discount extends from collaborative work to mentees’ independent work, regardless of the mentee's gender. Differences in the extent of this citation discount across groups of evaluators align with status characteristics theory rather than the Matthew Effect. The findings expose a consequential role of gender in mentoring the next generation with implications for research on mentorship, gendered evaluations and spillover effects, as well as transgenerational biases in cumulative knowledge building.
Coauthors: Marc Lerchenmüller (University of Mannheim), Leo Schmallenbach (University of Mannheim)
About Prof. Karin Hoisl:
Karin Hoisl is Full Professor of Organization and Innovation at the University of Mannheim. She is part-time Professor in the Economics and Management of Inventive Processes at the Department of Innovation and Organizational Economics at Copenhagen Business School and a research affiliate at the Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition, Munich. Karin Hoisl holds a PhD in Management from the Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich. Karin Hoisl is a former Associate Editor of the Strategic Management Journal and is currently an Associate Editor of Management Science, ICC Industrial, and Corporate Change, and the Journal of Industrial and Business Economics. She is a member of the Editorial Review Board of the Academy of Management Discoveries and an Advisory Editor of Research Policy. Her main research interests are IP and innovation, gender gaps in STEM, digital transformation and the future of work, and innovation in extreme environments. Her research has been published in Management Science, Organization Science, Strategic Management Journal, and Research Policy.
(Speaker Image Source: Anna Logue)
The runs a series of regular seminars given by visiting speakers to Manchester. These seminars are open to anybody who is interested in science, technology and innovation policy and management.
This event is in person for AMBS and UoM staff and students, with an online option available. External participants are welcome to join online via Zoom:
https://zoom.us/j/91482784494
Meeting ID: 914 8278 4494 | Passcode: 187168
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Alliance Manchester Business School (online also available), Booth Street West, Manchester, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00