pm133, it's not usual for people such as technicians and field assistants to be added to papers. What Tudor_Queen is describing is totally normal IMO.
Anyway, I have decided I will add the student's name to the poster. I'm still not convinced they should be included, but it doesn't really matter whether they are on there or not this time.
Great that you made a decision ToL! Stimulating thread this!
It isn't ridiculous pm133. It was completely acceptable in the context. I still interact now with those I was working for/with then, and I will do the same myself when I am in a position to! In my area of research, it does matter how many names are on a paper (especially if the person has not published much - or has only published papers where their name is one among many). I wasn't told this (or lied to about it) - I already knew it mattered. And I didn't expect to be on a paper unless I was contributing to it, rather than just collecting data, as I generally was doing.
Just to add - many papers have an acknowledgement section on, where various people (often students) are acknowledged for their assistance with data collection, coding, reliabilities etc. It really isn't so unusual.
It doesn't matter how many other authors there are besides you in first or last place, that's true. It does eventually matter whether some papers are without your PhD supervisors.
pm133 & ToL:- that's interesting/useful, I didn't really know about the ins and outs of it - always just thought fewer was better.
It might be in social sciences etc, but in science, more people can be a good thing because it shows collaboration as pm133 said.
Thanks pm133. But, I don't think I should have been on the papers. If you'd ask me to explain the theory or give a detailed rationale behind the study or what it contributed, I couldn't tell you. I could tell enough to explain to the participants, but I didn't have a detailed understanding of what it was all about - I more or less followed a protocol each time. And I don't think that warrants co-authorship. I think it would be different if I was a statistician, for instance, and my specialism was needed in order for the paper to be produced. As it was, any Tom, Dick, or Harry could have done what I did.
I am one of those people who refuses to be taken advantage of, when I can help it (and who rails out against and generally refuses to participate in the pee-taking things I see going on in academia). I stood to gain by getting experience collecting data etc (it all went on my CV, which I'm sure helped me get PhD funding), and, just as importantly at the time, by getting some good money (the RA rate was better than anything I'd have been able to find anywhere else for something so enjoyable). I think that having my name on the paper wouldn't have been appropriate in my specific case.
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