Group authorship, an excellent opportunity laced with ethical, legal and technical challenges.

Mohammad Hosseini, Alex O Holcombe, Marton Kovacs, Hub Zwart, Daniel S Katz, Kristi Holmes
Author Information
  1. Mohammad Hosseini: Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA. ORCID
  2. Alex O Holcombe: School of Psychology, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. ORCID
  3. Marton Kovacs: Institute of Psychology, ELTE Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, Hungary. ORCID
  4. Hub Zwart: Erasmus School of Philosophy, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, the Netherlands. ORCID
  5. Daniel S Katz: National Center for Supercomputing Applications, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA. ORCID
  6. Kristi Holmes: Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA. ORCID

Abstract

Group authorship (also known as corporate authorship, team authorship, consortium authorship) refers to attribution practices that use the name of a collective (be it team, group, project, corporation, or consortium) in the authorship byline. Data shows that group authorships are on the rise but thus far, in scholarly discussions about authorship, they have not gained much specific attention. Group authorship can minimize tensions within the group about authorship order and the criteria used for inclusion/exclusion of individual authors. However, current use of group authorships has drawbacks, such as ethical challenges associated with the attribution of credit and responsibilities, legal challenges regarding how copyrights are handled, and technical challenges related to the lack of persistent identifiers (PIDs), such as ORCID, for groups. We offer two recommendations: 1) Journals should develop and share context-specific and unambiguous guidelines for group authorship, for which they can use the four baseline requirements offered in this paper; 2) Using persistent identifiers for groups and consistent reporting of members' contributions should be facilitated through devising PIDs for groups and linking these to the ORCIDs of their individual contributors and the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) of the published item.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. U24 LM013751/NLM NIH HHS
  2. UL1 TR001422/NCATS NIH HHS

Word Cloud

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