Authorship Guidelines
It
is important that the correct
list of authors is attributed to
an article from the start of the
submission process. Author lists
with the incorrect information
can result in academic or
financial implications, whilst
also providing the reader with
the wrong information on where
the responsibility and
accountability for the published
work should lie.
All authors listed on a
submission must have given prior
approval to have their name
attributed to the file(s) that
are being submitted and agree to
the publication. The
corresponding author has
responsibility to ensure that
all authors qualify for, and
have agreed to, authorship of
the submission. They are also
responsible for informing all
co-authors of relevant editorial
information during the review
process.
Our recommendations are based on
the
ICMJE
criteria for authorship. Authors
must have:
-
Made substantial
contributions to the
conception or design of the
work; or the acquisition,
analysis, or interpretation
of data for the work.
-
Contributed to the drafting
the work, or revising it
critically for important
intellectual content.
-
Provided final approval of
the version to be published.
-
Agreed to be accountable for
all aspects of the work in
ensuring that questions
related to the accuracy or
integrity of any part of the
work are appropriately
investigated and resolved.
-
Agreed to be named on the
author list, and approved of
the full author list.
Those that meet some but do not
meet all of the above criteria
should be acknowledged in the
publication but not listed as an
author. Examples that do not
qualify for authorship but
should be acknowledged are
sources of funding, supervision
of research groups,
administrative support, language
editing and proof reading.
Written permission should be
obtained from those being
acknowledged, as in some cases
being named in such a way may be
seen as an endorsement of the
publication.
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