The bar chart displays how many male and female students involved in research were distributed among six different subjects in the year 2005.
Overall, it is clear that the subject with the vast majority of attenders was natural sciences, followed by psychology and engineering. There were more male students in general, with mathematics and programming demonstrating the largest gap between the two genders.
As for the most popular topic, natural sciences comprised 200 males and 200 females. Similarly, psychology had the same number of the former, although females were roughly 175. Concerning engineering, this subject had less subscribed overall, since there were 150 males and about 80 of the opposite sex.
Regarding the other fields of study, linguistics was the only one having more females (roughly 110) than males (around 80). However, males were more dominant in other subjects, like programming, at 150, whereas only 75 were female. Nevertheless, mathematics showed the most significant gap between enrolled people: males were 200, while females were roughly 40.
