Trauma and Emergency Surgery Service, Legacy Emanuel Medical Center, Portland, Oregon.
Department of Surgery, Madigan Army Medical Center, Tacoma, Washington.
JAMA Surg. 2019 Dec 1;154(12):1110-1116. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2019.3140.
Courtesy authorship is defined as including an individual who has not met authorship criteria as an author. Although most journals follow strict authorship criteria, the current incidence of courtesy authorship is unknown.
To assess the practices related to courtesy authorship in surgical journals and academia.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A survey was conducted from July 15 to October 27, 2017, of the first authors and senior authors of original articles, reviews, and clinical trials published between 2014 and 2015 in 8 surgical journals categorized as having a high or low impact factor.
The prevalence of courtesy authorship overall and among subgroups of authors in high impact factor journals and low impact factor journals and among first authors and senior authors, as well as author opinions regarding courtesy authorship.
A total of 203 first authors and 254 senior authors responded (of 369 respondents who provided data on sex, 271 were men and 98 were women), with most being in academic programs (first authors, 116 of 168 [69.0%]; senior authors, 173 of 202 [85.6%]). A total of 17.2% of respondents (42 of 244) reported adding courtesy authors for the surveyed publications: 20.4% by first authors (32 of 157) and 11.5% by senior authors (10 of 87), but 53.7% (131 of 244) reported adding courtesy authorship on prior publications and 33.2% (81 of 244) had been added as a courtesy author in the past. Although 45 of 85 senior authors (52.9%) thought that courtesy authorship has decreased, 93 of 144 first authors (64.6%) thought that courtesy authorship has not changed or had increased (P = .03). There was no difference in the incidence of courtesy authorship for low vs high impact factor journals. Both first authors (29 of 149 [19.5%]) and senior authors (19 of 85 [22.4%]) reported pressures to add courtesy authorship, but external pressure was greater for low impact factor journals than for high impact factor journals (77 of 166 [46.4%] vs 60 of 167 [35.9%]; P = .04). More authors in low impact factor journals than in high impact factor journals thought that courtesy authorship was less harmful to academia (55 of 114 [48.2%] vs 34 of 117 [29.1%]). Overall, senior authors reported more positive outcomes with courtesy authorship (eg, improved morale and avoided author conflicts) than did first authors.
Courtesy authorship use is common by both first and senior authors in low impact factor journals and high impact factor journals. There are different perceptions, practices, and pressures to include courtesy authorship for first and senior authors. Understanding these issues will lead to better education to eliminate this practice.
应邀署名是指将不符合署名标准的人列入作者名单。虽然大多数期刊都遵循严格的署名标准,但目前应邀署名的发生率尚不清楚。
评估外科期刊和学术界中与应邀署名相关的实践。
设计、设置和参与者:2017 年 7 月 15 日至 10 月 27 日,对 2014 年至 2015 年期间发表的原创文章、综述和临床试验的第一作者和资深作者进行了调查,这些文章发表在 8 种被归类为高或低影响因子的外科期刊中。
高影响力因子期刊和低影响力因子期刊中所有作者、高影响力因子期刊中第一作者和资深作者以及低影响力因子期刊中第一作者和资深作者的应邀署名的总体发生率和亚组发生率,以及作者对应邀署名的看法。
共有 203 名第一作者和 254 名资深作者(在提供性别数据的 369 名受访者中,271 名是男性,98 名是女性)做出了回应,其中大多数在学术项目中(第一作者,168 名中的 116 名[69.0%];资深作者,202 名中的 173 名[85.6%])。共有 17.2%的受访者(244 名中的 42 名)报告了在调查出版物中添加应邀署名:第一作者(157 名中的 32 名,20.4%)和资深作者(87 名中的 10 名,11.5%),但 53.7%(244 名中的 131 名)报告了在之前的出版物中添加了应邀署名,33.2%(244 名中的 81 名)曾在过去被列为应邀署名。尽管 85 名资深作者中有 45 名(52.9%)认为应邀署名有所减少,但 144 名第一作者中有 93 名(64.6%)认为应邀署名没有变化或有所增加(P = .03)。低影响力因子期刊和高影响力因子期刊的应邀署名发生率没有差异。第一作者(149 名中的 29 名[19.5%])和资深作者(85 名中的 19 名[22.4%])都报告了添加应邀署名的压力,但低影响力因子期刊的外部压力大于高影响力因子期刊(166 名中的 77 名[46.4%]比 167 名中的 60 名[35.9%];P = .04)。低影响力因子期刊的作者比高影响力因子期刊的作者认为应邀署名对学术界的危害较小(114 名中的 55 名[48.2%]比 117 名中的 34 名[29.1%])。总体而言,资深作者比第一作者报告了更多的应邀署名带来的积极结果(例如,改善士气和避免作者冲突)。
应邀署名在低影响力因子期刊和高影响力因子期刊的第一作者和资深作者中都很常见。第一作者和资深作者在添加应邀署名方面有不同的看法、实践和压力。了解这些问题将有助于更好地开展教育,以消除这种做法。