Gender ratios in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory (women/overall)*

The statistics are for the last six years, but I also have the data for an earlier time slice
Only research articles are included

Compare these ratios to overall results for Women in Linguistics

issue single author co-authored publications overall
2006, 24:1 2/4 1/2 3/6
2006, 24:2 2/4 0/2+1/2+2/3 = 3/7 5/11
2006, 24:3 0/5 1/2 1/7
2006, 24:4 3/4 0/3+2/3+0/2 = 0/8 3/12
2007, 25:1 1/3 1/2+0/2+1/3 = 2/7 2/10
2007, 25:2 1/4 0/2 1/6
2007, 25:3 3/6 -- 3/6
2007, 25:4 1/4 3/3 4/7
2008, 26:1 4/5 -- 4/5
2008, 26:2 2/4 0/2 2/6
2008, 26:3 1/4 0/2 1/6
2008, 26:4 1/4 0/2+0/2 = 0/4 1/8
2009, 27:1 1/3 1/2+1/2+2/2 = 4/6 5/9
2009, 27:2 3/6 -- 3/6
2009, 27:3 1/3 3/4 4/7
2009, 27:4 1/6 -- 1/6
2010, 28:1 3/4 2/2+1/2 = 3/4 6/8
2010, 28:2 2/6 -- 2/6
2010, 28:3 0/2 1/2+1/2+0/2+0/2 = 2/8 2/10
2010, 28:4 3/5 1/2+1/2+1/3 = 3/7 6/12
2011, 29:1 1/2 0/2+1/2+1/2+1/2+2/2 = 5/10 6/12
2011, 29:2 1/2 1/2+1/2+3/4+1/2 = 6/10 7/12
2011, 29:3 2/4 0/2+2/2+2/2 = 4/6 6/10
2011, 29:4 3/8 2/2 5/10
2012, 30:1 4/4 4/4+0/2+2/3 = 6/9 10/13
Total 46/106 = 0.43 48/115 = 0.42 94/221 = 0.43

NLLT contains eight articles co-authored solely by women (19) and 14 articles co-authored only by men (29). This means that of single-gender co-authored articles women have published 36% and that they represent 40% of authors in this category. I don't think the difference with the 42% of female authors in co-authored papers is significant, but I don't know how to check for this.
*Guesses and doubts indicated by "?"

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