Harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.

Authorship credit for multi-authored scientific publications is routinely allocated either by issuing full publication credit repeatedly to all coauthors, or by dividing one credit equally among all coauthors. The ensuing inflationary and equalizing biases distort derived bibliometric measures of me...

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Main Author: Nils T Hagen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2603311?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-35896efaa4924a4fa6c1ec8acec690302020-11-24T21:51:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-01-01312e402110.1371/journal.pone.0004021Harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.Nils T HagenAuthorship credit for multi-authored scientific publications is routinely allocated either by issuing full publication credit repeatedly to all coauthors, or by dividing one credit equally among all coauthors. The ensuing inflationary and equalizing biases distort derived bibliometric measures of merit by systematically benefiting secondary authors at the expense of primary authors. Here I show how harmonic counting, which allocates credit according to authorship rank and the number of coauthors, provides simultaneous source-level correction for both biases as well as accommodating further decoding of byline information. I also demonstrate large and erratic effects of counting bias on the original h-index, and show how the harmonic version of the h-index provides unbiased bibliometric ranking of scientific merit while retaining the original's essential simplicity, transparency and intended fairness. Harmonic decoding of byline information resolves the conundrum of authorship credit allocation by providing a simple recipe for source-level correction of inflationary and equalizing bias. Harmonic counting could also offer unrivalled accuracy in automated assessments of scientific productivity, impact and achievement.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2603311?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nils T Hagen
spellingShingle Nils T Hagen
Harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nils T Hagen
author_sort Nils T Hagen
title Harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.
title_short Harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.
title_full Harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.
title_fullStr Harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.
title_full_unstemmed Harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.
title_sort harmonic allocation of authorship credit: source-level correction of bibliometric bias assures accurate publication and citation analysis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Authorship credit for multi-authored scientific publications is routinely allocated either by issuing full publication credit repeatedly to all coauthors, or by dividing one credit equally among all coauthors. The ensuing inflationary and equalizing biases distort derived bibliometric measures of merit by systematically benefiting secondary authors at the expense of primary authors. Here I show how harmonic counting, which allocates credit according to authorship rank and the number of coauthors, provides simultaneous source-level correction for both biases as well as accommodating further decoding of byline information. I also demonstrate large and erratic effects of counting bias on the original h-index, and show how the harmonic version of the h-index provides unbiased bibliometric ranking of scientific merit while retaining the original's essential simplicity, transparency and intended fairness. Harmonic decoding of byline information resolves the conundrum of authorship credit allocation by providing a simple recipe for source-level correction of inflationary and equalizing bias. Harmonic counting could also offer unrivalled accuracy in automated assessments of scientific productivity, impact and achievement.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2603311?pdf=render
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