“…While it is too early to fully understand the effects of the pandemic on scholarly publishing, preliminary observations have suggested that submissions to journals have generally increased during the pandemic (Bell & Fong, 2020; Squazzoni et al, 2020), likely because many researchers lost access to their laboratories for some time and switched over to writing papers (Aubry et al, 2020). However, analyses of submissions to preprint servers (Cui et al, 2020; King & Frederickson, 2020; Viglione, 2020; VincentâLamarre et al, 2020) and journals (Bell & Fong, 2020; Kibbe, 2020; McCormick, 2020; Muric et al, 2020; Shurchkov, 2020; Squazzoni et al, 2020; but see Dolan & Lawless, 2020) suggest that submissions from women have either grown less than those from men, or have even declined, though the magnitude and presence of the gender difference has varied among disciplines. A decrease in the proportion of submissions authored by women suggests that the productivity of female scholars has been more substantially impacted by pandemic disruptions, compared to the productivity of male scholars, likely because many communities have closed primary schools, childcare facilities, and other public and private institutions that help manage children (Alon et al., 2020).…”