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10.1136/medethics-2015-103171

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.1136/medethics-2015-103171
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C4769679!4769679!26714812
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suck abstract from ncbi

pmid26714812      J+Med+Ethics 2016 ; 42 (3): 199-202
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  • Authorship policies of scientific journals #MMPMID26714812
  • Resnik DB; Tyle AM; Black JR; Kissling G
  • J Med Ethics 2016[Mar]; 42 (3): 199-202 PMID26714812show ga
  • We analysed the authorship policies of a random sample of 600 journals from the Journal Citation Reports database. 62.5% of the journals we sampled had an authorship policy. Having an authorship policy was positively associated with impact factor. Journals from the biomedical sciences and social sciences/humanities were more likely to have an authorship policy than journals from the physical sciences, engineering or mathematical sciences. Among journals with a policy, the most frequent type of policy was guidance on criteria for authorship (99.7%); followed by guidance on acknowledgments (97.3%); requiring that authors make substantial contributions to the research (94.7%); requiring that authors be accountable for the research as a whole (84.8%); guidance on changes in authorship (77.9%); requiring that authors give final approval to the manuscript (77.6%); requiring that authors draft or critically revise the manuscript (71.7%); providing guidance on corporate authorship (58.9%); prohibiting gift, guest or ghost authorship (31.7%); requiring authors to describe their contributions (5.3%); limiting the number of authors for some types of articles (4.0%) and requiring authors to be accountable for their part in the research (1.1%). None of the policies addressed equal contribution statements. Journals that do not have authorship policies should consider adopting or developing ones.
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