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In publishing

One interviewee's experiences seem to correlate with the IEEE Expert author who was worried about her byline: ``I've had two papers rejected - I used my first name in both. I've had three accepted, and I used only my initials in those. So now I submit papers with initials only; it doesn't hurt, just in case.''

Gender-biased language annoys several of the people we spoke to. While it may seem trivial to some, these women said it distracts them from their work. One said, ``In the AI linguistics class, we found sexism in all the example sentences. For example, the active person was always male: `John kicked the ball.' Women sometimes appeared in the passive role: `Bill threw the book at Jane.' The one exception was `Mary mended the sock.' Many of the women in the department were incensed at this, because it is blatantly sexist, totally unnecessary, and easily avoided. If AI is to attract and keep women's respect and interest, this sort of thing should be tackled first.''


ellens@ai.mit.edu
Wed Apr 6 14:30:07 EDT 1994