# Crediting multi-authored papers to single authors

**Authors:** Anna Tietze, Serge Galam, Philip Hofmann

arXiv: 1905.01943 · 2020-06-24

## TL;DR

This paper examines a new method for assigning credit to single authors in multi-authored papers, focusing on the concept of the 'α-author' to measure scientific leadership, and discusses practical challenges and alternatives.

## Contribution

It critically analyzes Hirsch's proposed 'α-author' credit assignment method and explores alternative approaches for evaluating scientific leadership and early career achievement.

## Key findings

- Using current h-index for α-author determination is problematic due to complex h-time dependence.
- Determining α-author at publication time is feasible and potentially more accurate.
- Alternative crediting methods can be used to assess early career achievement and leadership.

## Abstract

A fair assignment of credit for multi-authored publications is a long-standing issue in scientometrics. In the calculation of the $h$-index, for instance, all co-authors receive equal credit for a given publication, independent of a given author's contribution to the work or of the total number of co-authors. Several attempts have been made to distribute the credit in a more appropriate manner. In a recent paper, Hirsch has suggested a new way of credit assignment that is fundamentally different from the previous ones: All credit for a multi-author paper goes to a single author, the called ``$\alpha$-author'', defined as the person with the highest current $h$-index not the highest $h$-index at the time of the paper's publication) (J. E. Hirsch, Scientometrics 118, 673 (2019)). The collection of papers this author has received credit for as $\alpha$-author is then used to calculate a new index, $h_{\alpha}$, following the same recipe as for the usual $h$ index. The objective of this new assignment is not a fairer distribution of credit, but rather the determination of an altogether different property, the degree of a person's scientific leadership. We show that given the complex time dependence of $h$ for individual scientists, the approach of using the current $h$ value instead of the historic one is problematic, and we argue that it would be feasible to determine the $\alpha$-author at the time of the paper's publication instead. On the other hand, there are other practical considerations that make the calculation of the proposed $h_{\alpha}$ very difficult. As an alternative, we explore other ways of crediting papers to a single author in order to test early career achievement or scientific leadership.

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## Figures

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## References

21 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.01943/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.01943