I ran an experiment after seeing a few posts on Meta Stack Overflow and Meta Stack Exchange.
Most notably this post which suggested:
Create a new profile (low rep points) that can be recognized as female and participate. Take notice of how you feel with this profile and if your experience is different. Don't try to act like you think a woman would act, just do your thing and see if you get a different response.
I created a new profile that could be recognized as female, using the name Sarah Jane.
(A bad reference to a song by The Dead Milkmen, a satirical '80s punk rock band)
I used the profile casually for 41 days, posted 8 answers, a few comments, and a couple of edits.
The results of my, admittedly limited, experiment was that it is kinda lame to be a new user. Not being able to vote, close vote, and so on really limits ones experience on the site.
On the other hand I didn't personally see or feel any sexism in any of the exchanges I had as Sarah. Feel free to peruse Sarah Jane's activity tab perhaps I missed something.
This led me to the conclusion that sexism may be a problem on the network, but it isn't as common or pervasive as some have suggested.
Clarification of intent:
To be clear the reason I decided to run this experiment was that I was a little unsettled by the accusations of a sexist culture on SO.
It wasn't something that I had ever witnessed on SO, and I figured it may worth examining further. Perhaps sexism was common, I just wasn't seeing it because I wasn't in the position to see it.