This study examines gender disparities in authorship and collaboration within the
Spanish scientific workforce, focusing on international and industry co-authored
publications. Drawing on a comprehensive dataset of over 165,000 publications
and more than 170,000 identified authors a liated with Spanish institutions, the
analysis explores how gender interacts with authorship position, research field,
career stage, and team size. The results reveal a consistent under-representation
of women in both types of collaboration, particularly in key authorship roles
(first, last, and corresponding author). While women are more active at early
career stages, their visibility in leadership roles tends to diminish over time,
especially as the number of co-authors increases. Field-specific patterns show
that even in highly feminized disciplines, such as Biomedical & Health Sciences,
women are less likely to appear in prominent authorship positions. These findings
raise important concerns about current research assessment practices that rely
heavily on byline position as a proxy for contribution or leadership. The study
contributes to ongoing discussions on responsible metrics and proposes policy
recommendations to promote more equitable evaluation systems that reflect the
collaborative and diverse nature of research careers.MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ERDF, EU (PID2021-128429NB-I00)MCIN (PID2023-149087NB-I00
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