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Math! Science! History!Author: Gabrielle Birchak
Math! Science! History! is about the history of people, theories, and discoveries that have moved our scientific progress forward and spurred us on to unimaginable discoveries. Join Gabrielle Birchak for a little math, a little science, and a little history. All in a little bit of time. Language: en Genres: History, Mathematics, Science Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it Trailer: |
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The Math of Matilda
Episode 202
Tuesday, 24 March, 2026
This episode reframes the Matilda Effect not as a simple story of stolen credit, but as a mathematical and institutional process in which small biases compound over time. Drawing on sociology of science, network theory, and citation dynamics, the script explains how cumulative advantage systems, like preferential attachment and the Matthew Effect, amplify early visibility into lasting historical recognition, even without overt wrongdoing. It shows how peer review, authorship norms, invisible labor, and archival practices inherit and reinforce these dynamics, making later corrections ineffective. Ultimately, the episode argues that the Matilda Effect persists because recognition itself behaves mathematically, and that changing history requires deliberate intervention at the points where credit is first assigned, cited, preserved, and taught. What you'll learn: The Matilda Effect isn't about stolen ideas, it's about systems that compound bias. Small disadvantages early in a career can snowball into permanent historical erasure. Recognition follows mathematical rules like cumulative advantage and preferential attachment. Peer review doesn't reset inequality, it inherits it. Essential scientific labor often disappears because it doesn't generate "credit." Archives and citations decide what history remembers, and what it forgets. Delayed recognition isn't neutral; in cumulative systems, timing is everything. Where we cite, credit, and preserve work today shapes tomorrow's history. Even small acts of recognition matter, because they compound. 🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com 📚 To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h  🎧 Enjoying the Podcast? ☕ Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform Music: Shopping with Mom by Gabrielle Birchak. All other music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Until next time, carpe diem!








