Assigning authorship and recognizing contributions to scholarly works is challenging on many levels. Here we discuss ethical, social, and technical challenges to the concept of authorship that may impede the recognition of contributions to a scholarly work. Recent work in the field of authorship shows that shifting to a more inclusive contributorship approach may address these challenges. Recent efforts to enable better recognition of contributions to scholarship include the development of the Contributor Role Ontology (CRO), which extends the CRediT taxonomy and can be used in information systems for structuring contributions. We also introduce the Contributor Attribution Model (CAM), which provides a simple data model that relates the con...
Background: Multi-collaborator research is increasingly becoming the norm in the field of biomedicin...
The talk presents a mini case study of implementing the CRediT taxonomy (https://www.casrai.org/cred...
The practice of assigning authorship for a scientific publication tends to raise two normative quest...
Assigning authorship and recognizing contributions to scholarly works is challenging on many levels....
Original research papers with a small number of authors, particularly in the life sciences, are incr...
Contributorship statements were introduced by scholarly journals in the late 1990s to provide more ...
Issues of academic authorship pose few problems for philosophers or those in the humanities, yet rai...
The employment of research assistants (RAs) is extremely common in academia. RAs are junior research...
Authorship represents a highly discussed topic in nowadays academia. The share of co-authored papers...
In keeping with the growing movement in scientific publishing toward transparency in data and method...
Authorship of academic papers is a currency that can bring career advantages in academia and other i...
For most authors of scientific papers, writing is a struggle. Crisp Introductions, clear Methods, an...
Before the mid 20th century most scientific writing was solely authored (Claxton, 2005; Greene, 2007...
Authorship is the currency of an academic career for which the number of papers researchers publish ...
Who should be the author(s) of an academic paper? This question is becoming increasingly pressing, d...
Background: Multi-collaborator research is increasingly becoming the norm in the field of biomedicin...
The talk presents a mini case study of implementing the CRediT taxonomy (https://www.casrai.org/cred...
The practice of assigning authorship for a scientific publication tends to raise two normative quest...
Assigning authorship and recognizing contributions to scholarly works is challenging on many levels....
Original research papers with a small number of authors, particularly in the life sciences, are incr...
Contributorship statements were introduced by scholarly journals in the late 1990s to provide more ...
Issues of academic authorship pose few problems for philosophers or those in the humanities, yet rai...
The employment of research assistants (RAs) is extremely common in academia. RAs are junior research...
Authorship represents a highly discussed topic in nowadays academia. The share of co-authored papers...
In keeping with the growing movement in scientific publishing toward transparency in data and method...
Authorship of academic papers is a currency that can bring career advantages in academia and other i...
For most authors of scientific papers, writing is a struggle. Crisp Introductions, clear Methods, an...
Before the mid 20th century most scientific writing was solely authored (Claxton, 2005; Greene, 2007...
Authorship is the currency of an academic career for which the number of papers researchers publish ...
Who should be the author(s) of an academic paper? This question is becoming increasingly pressing, d...
Background: Multi-collaborator research is increasingly becoming the norm in the field of biomedicin...
The talk presents a mini case study of implementing the CRediT taxonomy (https://www.casrai.org/cred...
The practice of assigning authorship for a scientific publication tends to raise two normative quest...