Authorship of scientific articles has profoundly changed from early science until now. While once upon a time a paper was authored by a handful of authors, scientific collaborations are much more prominent on average nowadays. As authorship (and citation) is essentially the primary reward mechanism according to the traditional research evaluation frameworks, it turned out to be a rather hot-button topic from which a significant portion of academic disputes stems. However, the novel Open Science practices could be an opportunity to disrupt such dynamics and diversify the credit of the different scientific contributors involved in the diverse phases of the lifecycle of the same research effort. In fact, a paper and research data (or software) contextually published could exhibit different authorship to give credit to the various contributors right where it feels most appropriate. As a preliminary study, in this paper, we leverage the wealth of information contained in Open Science Graphs, such as OpenAIRE, and conduct a focused analysis on a subset of publications with supplementary material drawn from the European Marine Science (MES) research community. The results are promising and suggest our hypothesis is worth exploring further as we registered in 22% of the cases substantial variations between the authors participating in the publication and the authors participating in the supplementary dataset (or software), thus posing the premises for a longitudinal, large-scale analysis of the phenomenon.
翻译:科学文章的著作权从早期科学到现在都发生了深刻的变化。虽然曾经有一篇论文由少数作者撰写,科学合作在当今平均来说更加突出。根据传统的研究评估框架,作者(和引用)基本上是主要奖赏机制,因此,它是一个相当热点的话题,引起大量学术争端。然而,新的开放科学实践可能是一个机会,可以破坏这种动态,使参与同一研究工作生命周期不同阶段的不同科学贡献者获得的信用多样化。事实上,根据背景发表的论文和研究数据(或软件)可能显示不同的作者地位,在认为最合适的地方给予各贡献者以信用。作为初步研究,我们利用开放科学图中丰富的信息,例如OpenAIRE,对一组出版物进行重点分析,从欧洲海洋科学研究界收集补充材料。结果令人充满希望,并表明我们的说法值得进一步探讨,因为我们在参与出版的作者与参与大规模分析的作者之间,对大规模分析进行了22 % 。