Department of Bioethics and Health Humanities, School of Public and Population Health, Member of the Institute for Translational Sciences, University of Texas MedicalBranch, Galveston, TX, USA.
Sci Eng Ethics. 2023 Jun 21;29(4):22. doi: 10.1007/s11948-023-00445-1.
In health sciences, technical contributions may be undervalued and excluded in the author byline. In this paper, I demonstrate how authorship is a historical construct which perpetuates systemic injustices including technical undervaluation. I make use of Pierre Bourdieu's conceptual work to demonstrate how the power dynamics at play in academia make it very challenging to change the habitual state or "habitus". To counter this, I argue that we must reconceive technical contributions to not be a priori less important based on its nature when assigning roles and opportunities leading to authorship. I make this argument based on two premises. First, science has evolved due to major information and biotechnological innovation; this requires 'technicians' to acquire and exercise a commensurate high degree of both technical and intellectual expertise which in turn increases the value of their contribution. I will illustrate this by providing a brief historical view of work statisticians, computer programmers/data scientists and laboratory technicians. Second, excluding or undervaluing this type of work is contrary to norms of responsibility, fairness and trustworthiness of the individual researchers and of teams in science. Although such norms are continuously tested because of power dynamics, their importance is central to ethical authorship practice and research integrity. While it may be argued that detailed disclosure of contributions (known as contributorship) increases accountability by clearly identifying who did what in the publication, I contend that this may unintentionally legitimize undervaluation of technical roles and may decrease integrity of science. Finally, this paper offers recommendations to promote ethical inclusion of technical contributors.
在健康科学领域,技术贡献可能被低估和排除在作者署名之外。在本文中,我展示了作者身份是如何成为一种历史建构,延续了包括技术低估在内的系统性不公正。我利用皮埃尔·布迪厄的概念工作来展示学术界中发挥作用的权力动态如何使得改变习惯性状态或“习性”变得极具挑战性。为了应对这一挑战,我认为我们必须重新构想技术贡献,不要根据其性质在分配角色和获得作者身份的机会时先天地认为其不重要。我基于两个前提提出了这一论点。首先,科学的发展得益于重大的信息和生物技术创新;这需要“技术人员”获得并运用相应的高度技术和知识专长,这反过来又增加了他们贡献的价值。我将通过简要回顾工作统计员、计算机程序员/数据科学家和实验室技术员的历史来阐明这一点。其次,排除或低估这种类型的工作违反了个人研究人员和科学团队的责任、公平和可信度规范。尽管由于权力动态,这些规范不断受到考验,但它们对于道德作者身份实践和研究诚信至关重要。虽然有人可能会争辩说,详细披露贡献(称为贡献)通过明确识别出版物中谁做了什么来提高问责制,但我认为,这可能会无意中使技术角色的低估合法化,并可能降低科学的完整性。最后,本文提出了促进技术贡献者道德包容的建议。