- Joined
- Aug 19, 2009
- Messages
- 841
- Reaction score
- 113
Hey Happy Shinny People,
HP here. I'm sorry it's been so long, grad school is awesome (<3 my cohort ) but the workload is truly kicking my a**.
anyway, I am now working on some pub projects on which I will be 1st author (yay) working with other grad students as coauthors, but I have never really been on a project as a co-author so I have very little understanding of how you divide up tasks as a team. I'm sure this differs from team to team but I'm curious what others have done in the past. Based on the one example I have seen, I would run analyses and write up results, one person would do lit review and write the intro, another would write methods and perhaps review my analyses (since this is my weakest area), and a third would write the discussion section. As first author, I would be responsible for weaving all the writing together (overall editing and "flow", making sure we matched the journal's requirements) and being sort of a project manager, setting deadlines, submission, spearheading rewriting and resubmission. Does this sound feasible? or should a first author do "more"?
Thanks!
HP here. I'm sorry it's been so long, grad school is awesome (<3 my cohort ) but the workload is truly kicking my a**.
anyway, I am now working on some pub projects on which I will be 1st author (yay) working with other grad students as coauthors, but I have never really been on a project as a co-author so I have very little understanding of how you divide up tasks as a team. I'm sure this differs from team to team but I'm curious what others have done in the past. Based on the one example I have seen, I would run analyses and write up results, one person would do lit review and write the intro, another would write methods and perhaps review my analyses (since this is my weakest area), and a third would write the discussion section. As first author, I would be responsible for weaving all the writing together (overall editing and "flow", making sure we matched the journal's requirements) and being sort of a project manager, setting deadlines, submission, spearheading rewriting and resubmission. Does this sound feasible? or should a first author do "more"?
Thanks!