Thailand

#42 of 189

0.2% of editorial positions

1,479
Positions
1,159
Editors
932
Journals
34
Publishers
18.9
Mean h-index

Thailand ranks #42 among 189 countries. 1,479 positions across 932 journals. 1,159 editors. 24.4% female (below avg 33.7%). Mean h-index: 18.9 (below avg 22.7). 0.2% of global positions.

Gender distribution

Low gender-inference coverage: only 14.9% of editors here have an inferred gender. The 24.4% figure is a share of the classifiable minority, not of the whole board. Typically caused by CJK-script names (Chinese / Korean / Taiwanese) that gender-guesser can't handle.
Male
124
Female
40
Androgynous
9
Unknown
986

24.4% female · 75.6% male (of 164 resolved; global avg 33.7%)

Each editor counted once at this entity (composite identity key). Gender is inferred from the first name — not self-reported — and coverage drops for non-Latin-script names, which inflates the "unknown" bar in some countries.

Board diversity

Per-editor diversity indicators. Each editor is counted once (composite identity key). The Shannon columns use Pielou's normalisation J = H / ln(k) so values are comparable across entities with different numbers of categories. See the methodology for full definitions, use cases, and references (Shannon 1948; Pielou 1966; Jost 2006).

0.803
Pielou's J over OpenAlex scientific fields. High values mean this entity's editors span many disciplines (a broad multidisciplinary footprint); low values mean they cluster in one field. Especially informative for institution pages, where the country and org_type Shannons are trivially zero.
0.172
Pielou's J over the ROR org_type field (education, healthcare, facility, government, nonprofit, company, archive). Low values mean editors come overwhelmingly from one kind of institution — usually universities, which account for about 82% of editors dataset-wide. Higher values indicate editorial boards that reach into clinical practice, public labs, industry, or scientific societies.
20 yr
Median years since first OpenAlex-indexed publication, per unique editor. IQR 14–28 yr (spread 14 yr), mean 22.5 yr, n = 1,044. A low median with a small IQR indicates a board clustered in one career stage; a large IQR signals generational mix.