Kind: captions Language: en i'd like to welcome all of you to this convocation on the most important topic together we can do better certainly addressing sexual harassment the best estimates are about 50 of women faculty and staff experience sexual harassment and those numbers have not really shifted over time if you think about science right now we have a system that is built on dependence really singular dependence of trainees whether they are medical students whether they are undergraduates or if they're graduate students on faculty for their funding for their futures and that really sets up a dynamic that is highly problematic it really creates an environment in which harassment can occur generally speaking sexual forms of sexual harassment like come ons unwanted sexual advances those are actually the rarest forms of sexual harassment they actually don't happen very much mostly you see put-downs we use the metaphor of an iceberg to really get across the various forms of sexual harassment what's gotten most of the attention is unwanted sexual attention coercion those are in the public eye and i think everyone would agree we'd absolutely need to address those and then you have all the stuff that's underneath those are actually more than 90 of the sexual harassment you know the subtle exclusions being left off an email not being invited to a collaboration where you're the clear expert just these little moments that make a woman feel like she doesn't belong that's a really common experience we found that consistent gender harassment actually has the same impact as a single episode of unwanted sexual attention or coercion so it is not something to be ignored you