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Prevalence of articles with honorary authors and ghost authors in peer-reviewed medical journals.

机译:在同行评审的医学期刊中,名誉作者和幽灵作者的文章盛行。

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CONTEXT: Authorship in biomedical publications establishes accountability, responsibility, and credit. Misappropriation of authorship undermines the integrity of the authorship system, but accurate data on its prevalence are limited. OBJECTIVES: To determine the prevalence of articles with honorary authors (named authors who have not met authorship criteria) and ghost authors (individuals not named as authors but who contributed substantially to the work) in peer-reviewed medical journals and to identify journal characteristics and article types associated with such authorship misappropriation. DESIGN: Mailed, self-administered, confidential survey. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 809 corresponding authors (1179 surveyed, 69% response rate) of articles published in 1996 in 3 peer-reviewed, large-circulation general medical journals (Annals of Internal Medicine, JAMA, and The New England Journal of Medicine) and 3 peer-reviewed, smaller-circulation journals that publish supplements (American Journal of Cardiology, American Journal of Medicine, and American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Prevalence of articles with honorary authors and ghost authors, as reported by corresponding authors. RESULTS: Of the 809 articles, 492 were original research reports, 240 were reviews and articles not reporting original data, and 77 were editorials. A total of 156 articles (1 9%) had evidence of honorary authors (range, 11%-25% among journals); 93 articles (11%) had evidence of ghost authors (range, 7%-16% among journals); and 13 articles (2%) had evidence of both. The prevalence of articles with honorary authors was greater among review articles than research articles (odds ratio [OR], 1.8; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.2-2.6) but did not differ significantly between large-circulation and smaller-circulation journals (OR, 1.4; 95% CI, 0.96-2.03). Compared with similar-type articles in large-circulation journals, articles with ghost authors in smaller-circulation journals were more likely to be reviews (OR, 4.2; 95% CI, 1.5-13.5) and less likely to be research articles (OR, 0.49; 95% CI, 0.27-0.88). CONCLUSION: A substantial proportion of articles in peer-reviewed medical journals demonstrate evidence of honorary authors or ghost authors.
机译:背景:生物医学出版物的作者身份建立了责任制,责任感和信誉度。盗用作者身份会损害作者系统的完整性,但有关其流行程度的准确数据有限。目的:确定同行评审医学期刊中名誉作者(不符合作者标准的具名作者)和幽灵作者(未命名为作者但对研究作出重大贡献的个人)中文章的普遍性,并确定期刊的特征和与此类著作权盗用相关的文章类型。设计:邮寄,自我管理的机密调查。参与者:1996年,在3篇经过同行评审的大流通普通医学期刊(内科医学杂志,JAMA和新英格兰医学杂志)上,共有809位通讯作者(接受调查的1179名,回复率69%)和3篇经同行评审的发行量较小的期刊(《美国心脏病学杂志》,《美国医学杂志》和《美国妇产科杂志》)。主要观察指标:名著和幽灵作者的文章流行情况,如相应作者所报道。结果:在809篇文章中,有492篇是原始研究报告,有240篇是评论和未报告原始数据的文章,有77篇是社论。共有156篇文章(1 9%)有名誉作者的证据(范围在期刊中为11%-25%); 93篇文章(占11%)具有幽灵作者的证据(范围,期刊中占7%-16%);有13篇文章(占2%)有这两种证据。评论文章中具有荣誉作者的文章的患病率高于研究文章(赔率[OR],1.8; 95%置信区间[CI],1.2-2.6),但在大发行量期刊和小发行量期刊之间没有显着差异(OR,1.4; 95%CI,0.96-2.03)。与大发行量期刊上的同类文章相比,在小发行量期刊中具有幽灵作者的文章更有可能被评论(OR,4.2; 95%CI,1.5-13.5),而成为研究文章的可能性较小(OR, 0.49; 95%CI,0.27-0.88)。结论:经过同行评审的医学期刊中有相当多的文章证明了名誉作者或幽灵作者的证据。

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