Hi everyone
there may have been a thread on this that I've missed -- could someone kindly enlighten me on authorship of papers.
Once we have been awarded the PHD, the work becomes ours?
So if I write a paper and include a co-author who has not been affiliated with my phd, is this within my right to make the decision (to include so-and-so)?
Another question is that if I had 2 supervisors but now I write a paper based on my phd results and do not include them as co-authors, am I ok to do this?
thanks
love satchi
Dear Satchi,
Like a lot else that goes on in academia, co-authorship of papers has the smell of corruption about it. At best, what is done isn't how it should be done. The rule is supposed to be that any co-author of a paper can defend the entire paper. The common etiquette however (certainly in my field, i.e. biological science) is that supervisors get their names on the paper. Probably, first supervisor last. That, of course, is often tosh as - in my case as with many other PhD students - the supervisor hasn't the first idea about the paper content or the science/rationale behind it. But you have to think of ongoing relationships and references after you finish.
I would think if you signed your intellectual property rights away, you would remember and it would surely relate to some ongoing commercial or other specific interest that you would have been aware of from quite early on in the project. Otherwise, it's your intellectual property. Especially if it's a good thesis, it's one important "power" you retain. So although your PI (supervisor) might throw his/her weight around wanting to sort out the authors, order, etc., you have the final say.
In truth, what's important is that you get first authorship. No one really looks at the others, except perhaps the last one if they want to know whose group it is.
PS: I'm presuming you're not talking about co-first authorship. That really is a racket!
hi SimonG and Ian (mackem_beefy)
Thanks very much for your responses! I have looked--yes it is my intellectual property :-) I am supposed to have first authorship.
Another question though--the affiliation. What if I have already left the university and am still unemployed after receiving the letter of award (sitting at home!) and I write another paper based on my phd but by using the data in another way, am I still affiliated with my university then? How long (how much time) do I have where I can say I am still with my university? I am submitting another paper to a journal but I don't know what "position" to write, I am neither phd student nor research assistant/associate, I don't have an identity in that sense. At this moment I am just a housewife with a PhD.
Thanks in advance
love satchi
Satchi,
I was in the same situation as you in that whilst I was unemployed I continued to produce papers based on my PhD work (plus some extra not included in my PhD) in the hope it would improve my employability.
Once you've left the University and you clearly hold intellectual property rights, it's up to you whether you list one or both of your supervisors or just list who you want (even just yourself). Affiliation is also up to you, though it looks more professional to keep University affiliation on your papers.
However, your supervisors will no doubt still be providing employment references and as a courtesy you may still consider listing them as co-authors.
I chose to list my first supervisor who did contribute meaningfully and not my second supervisor who as the aforementioned "administrator" provided no direct contribution.
I also included my immediate predecessor (I was last of three to work on my project) as a thank you for his early assistance on two papers, but only my primary supervisor thereafter for a further three papers.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
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