| Literature DB >> 21931600 |
Ana Marušić1, Lana Bošnjak, Ana Jerončić.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this systematic review was to evaluate evidence about authorship issues and provide synthesis of research on authorship across all research fields.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21931600 PMCID: PMC3169533 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0023477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Selection of the articles for the systematic review.
Search keyword was ‘authorship’, limited to article as a publication type, search performed 15 January 2010. Asterisk : inclusion criteria – quantitive or qualitative research on the definition of or criteria for authorship, authors' contribution to the research and manuscript, order of authors on the byline, opinions of researchers and/or editors on authorship criteria, opinions of researchers and/or editors on authorship order; exclusion criteria: 1. research topics which use journal articles and their authors as a starting point for studying: collaborative or citation networks; authorship in the context of citation analysis; analysis of research collaboration outputs of institutions, groups, research fields; trends in authorship in journals, groups of journals, fields, institutions, countries, geographical regions; gender of authors in journals, groups of journals, fields, institutions, countries, geographical regions; 2. analysis of authorship attribution in literature, taxonomy, and psychology/cognitive research.
Figure 2Trends in publications on authorship research in different research areas since 1967, when the first research report was identified [.
No studies were identified in humanities.
Definitions of authorship, contributions for deserved authorship and authorship practices*.
| Article | Study population | Study topic |
| Spiegel, 1970 | Psychologists in USA | Single contribution that qualifies for authorship; Preferred solution to multiple authorship |
| Bridgewater, | Academic psychologists in USA | Agreement of respondents on qualifying contributions for authorship |
| Werley, | Nursing professionals in USA | Single contribution that qualifies for authorship; Preferred solution to multiple authorship |
| von Glinow, 1982 | Professionals associated with management journals in USA | Opinion of editors vs. editorial review board on collection of data as deserving authorship contribution |
| Waltz, | Health professionals in nursing in USA | Contributions that do not deserve authorship |
| van der Kloot, 1991 | Social psychologists and psychometricians in The Netherlands | Scores on a continuum scale of deserving authorship for different contributions |
| Diguisto, 1994 | University research staff in Australia | Value of contributions for deserving authorship |
| Floyd, 1994 | Authors of articles published in management journals | Importance of contributions for authorship |
| Goodman, 1994 | First authors or research articles in general medical journal | Prevalence of authors who satisfied ICMJE authorship criteria |
| Shapiro, 1994 | First authors from USA of research articles in general medical journal | Most frequent contributions by all authors as reported by first author |
| Wagner, 1994 | Single, first or second author in a psychology journal | Contribution importance for authorship |
| Eastwood, 1996 | Postdoctoral fellows at a university | Sufficient contribution for authorship |
| Bhopal, 1997 | Staff from university medical school in UK | Reported agreement with ICMJE authorship criteria; Contributions that alone merit authorship |
| Hamilton, 1997 | Business and non-business university faculty in USA | Deserving joint authorship for a single contribution |
| Netting, 1997 | University faculty and student in focus groups in USA | Emerging themes in authorship |
| Almeida, 1998 | Mental health professionals (physicians and non-physicians) in Brazil | Opinions of physicians vs. non-physicians on contributions valid for granting authorship |
| Butler, 1998 | Nurses expected to publish research in Canada | Agreement among nurses of different professional status on different authorship scenarios |
| Hoen, 1998 | Authors of articles published in national general medical journal in The Netherlands | Awareness and fulfilment of ICMJE criteria |
| White, 1998 | First authors of papers on nursing research from USA | Knowledge of authorship guidelines; Reported contributions to different aspects of manuscript; Prevalence of articles with all authors qualifying for authorship |
| Rose, 1999 | Ethics statements from scientific professional organizations in USA | Prevalence of statements on authorship in ethics codes |
| Tarnow, 1999 | Postdoctoral fellows in physics in USA | Knowledge of association authorship guidelines; Discussion of authorship criteria with supervisor; Criteria for designating postdocs or others as authors |
| Yank, 1999 | Articles in general medical journal | Contributions declared for authors and persons in acknowledgment lists |
| Bartle, 2000 | Faculty and students from psychology departments in USA | Most important contributions for authorship; Opinion of students vs. faculty on APA ethical guidelines |
| Hart, 2000 | Co-authors of papers in library science | Importance of research tasks for authorship |
| Price, 2000 | Faculty from institutions granting graduate degrees in nursing in USA | Criteria most important for authorship; Opinion on number of criteria needed for authorship; Role of journals in authorship issues |
| Phillips, | Authors of articles in large and small medical journals | Acknowledgement of medical writing assistance as authorship |
| Altman, 2002 | Authors of articles in general medical journals | Recognition of a methodologist as an author |
| Laband, 2002 | Authors in economic and agricultural economics journals | Fraction of production team given authorship rights in economics vs. agricultural economics |
| Mowatt, 2002 | Corresponding authors of Cochrane systematic reviews | Contributions of authors vs. Cochrane editorial team |
| Tarnow, 2002 | Members of American Physical Society (APS) | Use of APS authorship guidelines; Preference of authorship guidelines |
| Foote, 2003 | Biomedical journals | No. journals without definition of authorship in guidelines |
| Cohen, 2004 | Members of US and Canadian Academy of Pathology (USCAP) | Use of authorship guidelines; Expressed preference of authorship guideline |
| Etemadi, 2004 | Editors of medical journals in Iran | Opinions on criteria for authorship |
| Pignatelli, 2005 | Senior clinical researchers in France | Practices in authorship; Agreement with ICMJE criteria |
| Birnholtz, 2006 | Researchers in high energy physics | Themes in authorship in high energy physics |
| Burbonniere, 2006 | Researchers at a clinical centre in Canada | Satisfaction with use of in-house authorship guideline |
| Dhaliwal, 2006 | Faculty in teaching hospital in India | Acceptable criteria for authorship |
| Funk, 2007 | NIH postdoctoral fellows in USA | Awareness and use of authorship guidelines after RCR training |
| Geelhoed, 2007 | Authors of research articles in clinical psychology journals | Most common opinions on authorship decision process |
| Ilakovac, 2007 | Authors of research articles in general medical journal | Reliability of contribution declaration form for corresponding author |
| Wager, 2007 | Guidelines for authors in medical journals | Presence of authorship guidance; Reference to ICMJE authorship criteria |
| Birnholtz, | Researchers in high energy physics | Emerging themes in authorship |
| Ivaniš, 2008 | Authors of research articles in general medical journal | Prevalence of authors satisfying ICMJE criteria when declaring contributions in a binary vs. ordinal rating scale |
| Lang, 2008 | Experienced medical writers from USA | Opinion on deserved authorship for medical writers |
| Louis, 2008 | High profile researchers in biomedicine in USA | Identified guiding factors for authorship decisions |
| Baerloccher, 2009 | Original research articles in general medical journals | Number of authors after introduction of contribution disclosure requirement |
| Pulido, 2009 | Spanish authors in health who publish in international journals | Most important contributions for any author vs. first author; Knowledge of ICMJE criteria |
| Rowan-Legg, 2009 | Guidelines published in biomedical journals | Prevalence of journals with authorship addressed in guidelines |
| Samad, 2009 | Pakistani medical and dental journals | Prevalence of journals with no guidance on authorship |
| Castleden, 2010 | Researchers involved in research with Indigenous communities in Canada | Collective/community authorship as emerging practice |
| House, | Faculty from departments of chemistry in USA | Factors explaining deserved authorship; Factors explain and influences on authorship |
| McDonald, 2010 | Articles from medical journals | Influence of authorship restriction policies on number of authors, 1986 to 2006 |
| Morris, 2010 | All (n = 39) Australian universities | No. universities with authorship policy and policy rating |
| Seeman, | Faculty from departments of chemistry in USA | Situational differences in authorship decisions |
| Street, 2010 | Staff and doctoral candidates in health research at Australian universities | Emerging themes in authorship |
*Abbreviations: ICMJE, International Committee of Medical Journal Editors; APA, American Psychological Association; NIH, National Institutes of Health, USA; RCR, responsible conduct of research.
Partial or full replication or modification of questionnaire by Spiegel and Keith Spiegel, 1970 [11].
Sub-analysis of data from Flanagin et al [38].
The same study as Birnholtz, 2006 [79].
House and Seeman [119] and Seeman and House [126] present results from the same study.
Order of authors on the byline*.
| Article | Study population | Study topic |
| Zuckerman, 1967 | Nobel laureates in USA and matched scientists | 1st authorship of laureates vs. others |
| Zuckerman, | Nobel laureates in USA and matched scientists | Ratio observed/expected frequency of papers with 6 or more authors and name order pattern for laureates vs. others |
| Over, 1970 | Articles published in | Percent authors with A–E vs. P–Z surnames in a journal with alphabetical author listing |
| Spiegel, 1970 | Psychologists in USA | Preferred method for authorship order when contributions are equal |
| Werley, | Nursing professionals in USA | Preferred method for authorship order when contributions are equal |
| von Glinow, 1982 | Professionals associated with management journals in USA | Preferred method for ordering authors |
| Over, 1982 | Articles in psychology journals | Change in number of articles with alphabetical ordering of authors from 1949 to 1979 |
| Waltz, | Health professionals in nursing in USA | Preferred method for authorship order when contributions are equal |
| Gay, | Educators in nursing USA | Methods for determining authorship |
| McCarl, 1993 | Citations in 5 journals on agricultural economics | Chance of having a citation when first-author has a Z or A surname |
| Shulkin, 1993 | Articles by chairs of department of medicine in USA | Last-authorship papers of short-term vs. long-term chairs |
| Shapiro, 1994 | First authors from USA of research articles in general medical journal | No. and type of contributions of first vs. last author |
| Wagner, 1994 | Single, first or second author in a psychology journal | Mean percent contributions for different authorship positions |
| Davies, 1996 | Chairs of pediatric departments and deans of medical faculties in Canada | Opinions on value of first author contribution in individual or group authorship |
| Slone, 1996 | First authors from USA on papers from a radiology journal | Reported contributions of first authors vs. 5th–10th author |
| Butler, 1998 | Nurses in Canada, expected to publish research | Agreement among nurses that order of authorship should be based on contributions, not status |
| Drenth, 1998 | Authors of articles in general medical journal 1975–1995 | Prevalence of senior level authors as last authors in 1975 vs. 1995 |
| White, 1998 | First authors from USA on papers on nursing research | Knowledge of agency or institution guidelines for authorship sequencing |
| Engers, 1999 | Articles from journals on law, economics, social sciences, natural sciences or medicine | Prevalence of alphabetical ordering of authors |
| Yank, 1999 | Articles in general medical journal | Contributions for different authorship byline position |
| Hart, 2000 | Co-authors of papers in library science | Most prevalent method of ordering authors |
| Chambers, 2001 | Articles in general medical journal | Most common letters for surnames of first authorship |
| Laband, 2002 | Authors of articles in economic and agricultural economics journals | Prevalence of alphabetized co-authorship |
| Mowatt, 2002 | Corresponding authors of Cochrane systematic reviews | Reported practices in deciding on authors' order |
| Tarnow, 2002 | Members of American Physical Society (APS) | Probability of change after initial authorship list is determined |
| Bhandari, 2003 | Editorial board members of medical journal in USA | Agreement on method for authorship order |
| Bhandari, 2004 | Chairs of surgery or medicine departments in Canada | Change in assignment of authorship credit to first or last author when they are corresponding authors |
| Cohen, 2004 | Members of US and Canadian Academy of Pathology (USCAP) | Probability of change after initial authorship list is determined |
| Meyer, 2004 | Editorial members of accounting journals and young accounting faculty members in USA | Perceived behaviour appropriateness and occurrence and actual knowledge of occurrence of co-authorship issues |
| Apgar, 2005 | Members of Society for Social Work and Research in USA | Opinions on authorship order |
| Hilmer, 2005 | Faculty members of agricultural economics departments in USA and their publications | Prevalence of alphabetical authorship in co-authored vs. multi-authored articles; Estimated annual salary return to an additional article depending on alphabetical authorship |
| Pignatelli, 2005 | Senior clinical researchers in France | Practice of ordering authorship |
| Brown, 2006 | Multiauthored articles from academic institutions published n marketing journals | Percent alphabetical ordering of authors |
| Einaw, 2006 | Faculty of economic or psychology departments, Econometric Society (ES) fellows, Nobel laureates and Clark Winners, authors of articles in economics journals in USA | Increase in probability for tenure status with each letter closer to the front of the alphabet; Percent multiauthored articles with alphabetical authorship in economics journals |
| Laband, 2006 | Articles in journals from medicine, natural sciences, economics, social sciences and general journals | Mean change in prevalence of alphabetical authorship in co-authored articles from 1974 to 1999 |
| Manton, 2006 | Business faculty in USA | Opinion on method of listing authors |
| Moore, 2006 | Authors of articles in educational research journals | Preferred method of authorship order |
| Baerlocher, 2007 | Articles in general medical journals | Satisfaction of ICMJE criteria 1 and 2, depending on byline position |
| Kurichi, 2007 | Chairs of surgery departments in USA medical schools | Likelihood for authorship position in regard to serving as chair |
| Manton, 2007 | Faculty of colleges of business in USA | Preferred method of listing co-authors |
| van Praag, 2008 | Articles published in mainstream economics journals | Prevalence of articles with alphabetical authorship |
| Hu, 2009 | Articles in biomedical or multidisciplinary journals | Increase in prevalence of equal first authorships |
| Maciejeovsky, 2009 | Faculty members and advanced graduate students from economics, marketing and psychology in USA/UK | Prevalence of alphabetical authorship; Preferences for credit to a position in multiauthored papers; Inferences based on authorship order |
| Akhabue, 2010 | Original research articles from general medical journal | Trends in equal authorships from 2000 to 2009 |
| Chan, 2010 | Multi-authored original research articles from academic real estate journals | Prevalence of alphabetical authorship from 1990 to 2006; Likelihood for alphabetical authorship |
| Frandsen, 2010 | Articles from economics, library information science (LIS) and high-energy physics (HEP) journals | Yearly change in share of articles with alphabetic authorship from 1978 to 2007 |
| Walker, 2010 | Corresponding authors of original research articles in medical journals | Opinion on authorship position with greatest merit for promotion; Practice of ordering authorship position |
*Abbreviations: ICMJE, International Committee of Medical Journal Editors.
The same study as Zuckerman, 1967 [8].
Partial or full replication or modification of questionnaire by Spiegel and Keith Spiegel, 1970 [11].
Ethical and unethical authorship practices*.
| Article | Study population | Study topic |
| Spiegel, 1970 | Psychologists in USA | Ethical practices in granting authorship |
| Werley, | Nursing professionals in USA | Ethical practices in granting authorship |
| von Glinow,1982 | Professionals associated with management journals in USA | Ethical practices in granting authorship |
| Waltz,a 1985 | Health professionals in nursing in USA | Ethical practices in granting authorship |
| Gay, | Health professionals in nursing in USA | Ethical practices in granting authorship and publishing multiple publications from the same study |
| van der Kloot, 1991 | Social psychologists and psychometricians in The Netherlands | Agreement about authorship between professors and junior researchers |
| Eastwood, 1996 | Postdoctoral fellows at a university in USA | Willingness to engage in giving undeserved authorship |
| Slone, 1996 | First authors from USA on papers from a radiology journal | Reported undeserved authorship for co-authors; Reasons for undeserved authorship; Time of decision on authorship |
| Bhopal, 1997 | Staff from university medical school in UK | Reported problems with authorship; Gift authorship |
| Hamilton, 1997 | Business and non-business university faculty in USA | Views on unethical authorship practices |
| Bulter, 1998 | Nurses expected to publish research in Canada | Agreement among nurses about ethical issues in authorship |
| Flanagin, 1998 | Corresponding authors from USA on articles in large and small medical journals | Reported prevalence of research articles with undeserved or undisclosed or ghost authorship |
| White, 1998 | First authors from USA on papers on nursing research | Reported issues, problems and concerns about author inclusion or ordering |
| Wilcox, 1998 | Cases brought to university ombuds office in USA | Authorship issues in cases 1991/92 vs. 1996/97 |
| Tarnow, 1999 | Postdoctoral fellows in physics in USA | Reported papers where supervisor did not satisfy APS guidelines; Reasons for inappropriate authorship |
| Price, 2000 | Faculty from institutions granting graduate degrees in nursing in USA | Experiences and opinions on unethical authorship practices |
| Reidpath, 2001 | Authors of articles published in general medical journal | Reported authorship was among stipulations for sharing data-set from their article |
| Mainous, 2002 | Corresponding authors of research articles in medical journals | Personal or professional concerns in authorship; Opinion on effective ways for authorship decisions |
| Mowatt, 2002 | Corresponding authors of Cochrane systematic reviews | Prevalence of honorary authors or ghost and honorary authors |
| Tarnow, 2002 | Members of American Physical Society (APS) | Probability that an additional author is inappropriate; Comfort for younger vs. older respondent to deny undeserving authorship |
| Hwang, 2003 | Research articles in medical journal | Prevalence of undeserved ICMJE authorship |
| Bates, 2004 | Research articles in medical journals with different contribution declaration forms | Prevalence of undeserved ICMJE authorship |
| Buchkowsky, 2004 | Clinical trials published in medical journals | Increase in author affiliation with industry from 1981/1984 to 1997/2000 |
| Cohen, 2004 | Members of US and Canadian Academy of Pathology (USCAP) | Probability that an additional author is inappropriate; Reported denying undeserved authorship |
| Marušić, 2004 | Research articles in general medical journal | Prevalence of undeserved ICMJE authorship |
| Meyer, 2004 | Editorial members of accounting journals and young accounting faculty members in USA | Perceived behaviour appropriateness/behaviour occurrence/actual knowledge of occurrence of co-authorship issues |
| Procyshyn, 2004 | Research articles on antipsychotic drugs in medical journals | Prevalence of authors affiliated with 3 pharmaceutical firms |
| Szirony, 2004 | Nursing faculty members in USA | Formal teaching to graduate students about authorship credit in publications; Ethical decisions in authorship |
| Apgar, 2005 | Members of Society for Social Work and Research in USA | Unethical granting of authorship |
| Freda, 2005 | Editors of nursing journals | Reported prevalence of ethical issues about authorship encountered in editorial work |
| Joubert, 2005 | Authors of research papers from university in South Africa | Reported prevalence of ethical issues in authorship |
| Mixon Jr, 2005 | Articles published in more and less prestigious economics journals | Ratio between number of authors and contributors in acknowledgment |
| Pignatelli, 2005 | Senior clinical researchers in France | Opinions and reported experience on gift and ghost authorship |
| Dhaliwal, 2006 | Faculty in teaching hospital in India | Reported conflict over authorship |
| Manton, 2006 | Business faculty in USA | Reported experience of unethical granting of authorship |
| Marušić, 2006 | Authors of articles in general medical journal | Prevalence of authors not satisfying ICMJE criteria in different forms of contribution declaration |
| Funk, 2007 | NIH postdoctoral fellows in USA | Ethically appropriate responses to case vignettes at 3 time points after training on RCR |
| Geelhoed, 2007 | Authors of articles in clinical psychology journals | Experiences about fairness and ease of authorship decision process |
| Gotsche, 2007 | Clinical trial protocols and publications from Sweden | Prevalence of ghost authorship |
| Hren, 2007 | Medical students with or without instruction on ICMJE criteria, physicians and medical faculty in Croatia | Opinions on eligible contributions for authorship |
| Manton, 2007 | Faculty of colleges of business in USA | Reported that co-authors did very little/no work |
| Peppercorn, 2007 | Articles on breast cancer clinical trials in medical journals | Prevalence of pharmaceutical company authorship on published studies |
| Tungaraza, 2007 | Published clinical trials on psychiatric drug treatment | Prevalence of industry-authored studies |
| O'Brien, 2009 | Corresponding authors of original research articles in general medical journals | Reported experience or opinion unethical authorship |
| Wager, 2009 | Editors of journals published by Blackwell | Reported experience of ethical issues in authorship |
| Ahmed, 2010 | Participants in bioethics course in Bangladesh | Experiences of authorship conflicts |
| Lacasse, 2010 | Public policies of academic medical centres in USA | Prevalence of policies banning ghostwriting |
| Nastasee, 2010 | Articles in medical journals | Increase in acknowledgment of medical writing from 2000 to 2007 |
| Rose, 2010 | Clinical trials published in oncology journal | Odds for authors reporting financial ties to industry: |
| Seeman, | Faculty from departments of chemistry in USA | Experience of unethical behaviour in authorship |
*bbreviations: NIH, National Institutes of Health, USA; RCR, responsible conduct of research.
Partial or full replication or modification of questionnaire by Spiegel and Keith Spiegel, 1970 [11].
The same study as House and Seeman [119] and Seeman and House [126].
Figure 3Forest plot of reported rates of problems with or misuse of authorship in self- or non-self reports in 14 survey studies [31], [41], [46], [50], [75], [77], [78], [82], [85], [91], [96], [109], [114], [126.
The area of a square represent sample size, horizontal lines are 95% confidence interval, diamond and vertical dotted line show the pooled weighted estimate.
Figure 4Forest plot of reported rates of problems with or misuse of authorship in self- or non-self reports in 12 survey studies from USA, UK or international journals [, [41], [46], [50], [78], [85], [109], [126.
The area of a square represent sample size, horizontal lines are 95% confidence interval, diamond and vertical dotted line show the pooled weighted estimate.
Figure 5Forest plot of reported rates of problems with or misuse of authorship in self- or non-self reports in 4 survey studies from South Africa, France, India, or Bangladesh [, [77], [82], [114.
The area of a square represent sample size, horizontal lines are 95% confidence interval, diamond and vertical dotted line show the pooled weighted estimate.
Authorship in researcher – student/non-researcher collaborations*.
| Article | Study population | Study topic |
| Spiegel, 1970 | Psychologists in USA | Opinion on deserved authorship for students/non-researchers; Preferred outcome for student-professor collaboration |
| Werley, | Nursing professionals in USA | Opinion on deserved authorship for students/non-researchers; Preferred outcome for student-professor collaboration |
| Waltz, | Health professionals in nursing in USA | Opinion on deserved authorship for students/non-researchers |
| Gay,a 1987 | Educators in nursing in USA | Opinion on deserved authorship for students/non-researchers |
| Costa, 1992 | Psychology students and faculty in USA | Faculty vs. students views of authorship order for published dissertation with different level of faculty input |
| Goodyear, 1992 | Editorial board members and authors of psychology journals in USA | Reported critical incidents related to student research |
| Brown-Wright, 1997 | Graduate assistants and faculty members in USA | Assistance in analysis of research data warrants authorship for graduate assistant – faculty vs. Assistants |
| Rose, 1988 | Graduate students in physics, biological, engineering and social sciences in USA | Opinion on deserved authorship for students; Perceived reporting of authorship problems |
| Louw, 1999 | Academic and non-academic psychologists and masters' degree students in South Africa | Deserving first authorship by academics, non-academics and students |
| Bartle, 2000 | Faculty and students from psychology departments in USA | Agreement of faculty vs. students on authorship from student-faculty collaboration |
| Meyer, 2004 | Editorial members of accounting journals and young accounting faculty members in USA | Perceived behaviour appropriateness/behaviour occurrence/actual knowledge of occurrence of co-authorship issues between faculty and students |
| Szirony, 2004 | Nursing faculty members in USA | Opinions on unethical authorship in student-professor collaboration |
| Apgar, 2005 | Members of Society for Social Work and Research in USA | Opinions on unethical authorship in student-professor collaboration |
| Sandler, 2005 | APA members and students with a publication from student-faculty collaboration in USA | Involvement in and reporting of perceived unethical or unfair authorship assignment |
| Weltzin, 2006 | Participants of ecology meeting in USA | Opinion on first authorship in student-professor collaboration |
| Geelhoed, 2007 | Authors of articles in clinical psychology journals | Opinion of students vs. faculty on influences on authorship decision making |
| Tryon, 2007 | Doctoral students in school psychology in USA | Different opinions on first authorship in publications from dissertations |
| Picard, 2010 | Students and supervisors from agriculture school in Australia | Agreement on authorship issues between students and professors |
| Welfare, 2010 | Students and faculty from US universities with graduate studies in education | Opinion of students vs. faculty for common and recommended practices in authorship |
*Abbreviations: APA, American Psychological Association.
Partial or full replication or modification of questionnaire by Spiegel and Keith Spiegel, 1970 [11].