And the credit goes to … - Ghost and honorary authorship among social scientists.

Gernot Pruschak, Christian Hopp
Author Information
  1. Gernot Pruschak: TIME Research Area, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany. ORCID
  2. Christian Hopp: TIME Research Area, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany.

Abstract

The proliferation of team-authored academic work has led to the proliferation of two kinds of authorship misconduct: ghost authorship, in which contributors are not listed as authors and honorary authorship, in which non-contributors are listed as authors. Drawing on data from a survey of 2,222 social scientists from around the globe, we study the prevalence of authorship misconduct in the social sciences. Our results show that ghost and honorary authorship occur frequently here and may be driven by social scientists' misconceptions about authorship criteria. Our results show that they frequently deviate from a common point of authorship reference (the ICMJE authorship criteria). On the one hand, they tend to award authorship more broadly to more junior scholars, while on the other hand, they may withhold authorship from senior scholars if those are engaged in collaborations with junior scholars. Authorship misattribution, even if it is based on a misunderstanding of authorship criteria rather than egregious misconduct, alters academic rankings and may constitute a threat to the integrity of science. Based on our findings, we call for journals to implement contribution disclosures and to define authorship criteria more explicitly to guide and inform researchers as to what constitutes authorship in the social sciences. Our results also hold implications for research institutions, universities, and publishers to move beyond authorship-based citation and publication rankings in hiring and tenure processes and instead to focus explicitly on contributions in team-authored publications.

References

  1. Sci Eng Ethics. 2016 Oct;22(5):1457-1472 [PMID: 26507204]
  2. Mayo Clin Proc. 2010 Oct;85(10):920-7 [PMID: 20884825]
  3. PLoS One. 2015 Jun 10;10(6):e0127502 [PMID: 26061978]
  4. Sci Adv. 2017 Nov 08;3(11):e1700404 [PMID: 29152564]
  5. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Mar 13;115(11):2557-2560 [PMID: 29487213]
  6. J Res Med Sci. 2014 Feb;19(2):87-9 [PMID: 24778659]
  7. JAMA. 1998 Jul 15;280(3):219-21 [PMID: 9676660]
  8. Radiology. 2011 May;259(2):324-7 [PMID: 21386052]
  9. Nature. 2005 Jun 9;435(7043):737-8 [PMID: 15944677]
  10. JAMA. 2002 Jun 5;287(21):2769-71 [PMID: 12038907]
  11. JAMA. 2004 Jul 7;292(1):86-8 [PMID: 15238595]
  12. Nature. 2010 Mar 25;464(7288):488-9 [PMID: 20336116]
  13. Psychol Rep. 2000 Jun;86(3 Pt 1):771-88 [PMID: 10876325]
  14. PLoS One. 2011;6(10):e23223 [PMID: 22003380]
  15. Science. 2012 Aug 31;337(6098):1019 [PMID: 22936744]
  16. Emerg Med (Fremantle). 2003 Jun;15(3):263-70 [PMID: 12786648]
  17. N Engl J Med. 1994 Sep 8;331(10):673-5; discussion 676 [PMID: 8052280]
  18. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2016 Oct 4;55(41):12548-9 [PMID: 27558212]
  19. Soc Stud Sci. 2016 Jun;46(3):417-435 [PMID: 28948891]
  20. PLoS Biol. 2018 Mar 29;16(3):e2004089 [PMID: 29596415]
  21. Ambio. 2017 Feb;46(1):121-127 [PMID: 27686730]
  22. Acad Emerg Med. 2008 Oct;15(10):963-9 [PMID: 18801021]
  23. Nature. 2018 Sep;561(7722):167-169 [PMID: 30209384]
  24. BMJ. 2011 Oct 25;343:d6128 [PMID: 22028479]
  25. Account Res. 2021 Apr;28(3):133-148 [PMID: 32744060]
  26. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Nov 28;114(48):12708-12713 [PMID: 29138317]
  27. Science. 2007 May 18;316(5827):1036-9 [PMID: 17431139]
  28. Mutat Res. 2005 Jan;589(1):31-45 [PMID: 15652225]
  29. Science. 2007 Sep 14;317(5844):1496-8; author reply 1496-8 [PMID: 17872425]
  30. J Am Diet Assoc. 1999 Jan;99(1):77-9 [PMID: 9917736]
  31. EMBO Rep. 2007 Nov;8(11):988-91 [PMID: 17972896]
  32. Account Res. 2011 Mar;18(2):76-90 [PMID: 21390872]
  33. PLoS One. 2011;6(9):e23477 [PMID: 21931600]
  34. PLoS One. 2021 Jun 21;16(6):e0251194 [PMID: 34153038]
  35. Sci Eng Ethics. 2018 Apr;24(2):629-645 [PMID: 28397174]
  36. Perspect Biol Med. 2007 Winter;50(1):18-31 [PMID: 17259673]
  37. Presse Med. 2012 Sep;41(9 Pt 1):861-6 [PMID: 22727914]
  38. Am J Med. 2012 Apr;125(4):324-6 [PMID: 22305580]

MeSH Term

Allied Health Personnel
Authorship
Humans
Publishing
Surveys and Questionnaires

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0authorshipsocialcriteriahonoraryresultsmayscholarsproliferationteam-authoredacademicghostlistedauthorsscientistsmisconductsciencesshowfrequentlyhandjuniorrankingsexplicitlyworkledtwokindsmisconduct:contributorsnon-contributorsDrawingdatasurvey2222aroundglobestudyprevalenceoccurdrivenscientists'misconceptionsdeviatecommonpointreferenceICMJEonetendawardbroadlywithholdseniorengagedcollaborationsAuthorshipmisattributionevenbasedmisunderstandingratheregregiousaltersconstitutethreatintegrityscienceBasedfindingscalljournalsimplementcontributiondisclosuresdefineguideinformresearchersconstitutesalsoholdimplicationsresearchinstitutionsuniversitiespublishersmovebeyondauthorship-basedcitationpublicationhiringtenureprocessesinsteadfocuscontributionspublicationscreditgoes-Ghostamong

Similar Articles

Cited By