But why would she be assumed to be the product manager (or its equivalent in the academic realm)? She has a doctorate in Computer Science from MIT, so she clearly has the technical chops. And she's in the early stages of her academic career, so she hasn't reached the point where she would have the ability to claim grad students' work as her own (which would also be a huge ethical lapse, though apparently it does happen [often with women as the victims]).
In my experience, people don't start looking into these things without some other suspicion. In a work setting, that would be things like impressions of poor productivity, claimed output not matching perceptions of competency, etc. But those involve a ton of data points, based on direct interactions with the person. In this case, the article gives us the following demographic data points:
- 29 years old
- Woman
- Computer Science doctorate from MIT
- Assistant professor of computing and mathematical sciences at the California Institute of Technology
Which of those data points suggests that her work output should be questioned?
In my experience, people don't start looking into these things without some other suspicion. In a work setting, that would be things like impressions of poor productivity, claimed output not matching perceptions of competency, etc. But those involve a ton of data points, based on direct interactions with the person. In this case, the article gives us the following demographic data points:
- 29 years old
- Woman
- Computer Science doctorate from MIT
- Assistant professor of computing and mathematical sciences at the California Institute of Technology
Which of those data points suggests that her work output should be questioned?