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Hi, hoping there are seasoned residents/attendings who would know how to approach this.
Short story: A resident and I wrote a review paper. Was meant to be equal-I did half and the resident did half. However, the resident is international and I had to rewrite the entire portion that was the resident's responsibility (it was completely unreadable). I don't mind, it happens, I've had to extensively edit foreign medical grads' work before. However, at this point I'm writing the entire paper by myself....and it brings up the question of authorship.
I've been involved in research for 10 years and have always let someone else take authorship over me. For a Nature paper that I did ALL the work for 4 years and wrote the entire paper, I was slowly bumped down to 10th author in front of my eyes (I was promised 2nd because it was my project but the post doc overseeing it was to get 1st...made sense) and didn't say anything because I didn't know how to approach it. Just as recently as last month I took 3rd author to a younger med student who didn't do nearly as much work as me. I'm sick of being an academic push over and it's past time I learn how to stand up for myself and my work.
I want to break out of this pattern where I do a lot of work and don't get the appropriate credit. How should I address this with my PI? Have others successfully navigated situations like this? How can I phrase this in a professional manner to my PI? Any thoughts?
Short story: A resident and I wrote a review paper. Was meant to be equal-I did half and the resident did half. However, the resident is international and I had to rewrite the entire portion that was the resident's responsibility (it was completely unreadable). I don't mind, it happens, I've had to extensively edit foreign medical grads' work before. However, at this point I'm writing the entire paper by myself....and it brings up the question of authorship.
I've been involved in research for 10 years and have always let someone else take authorship over me. For a Nature paper that I did ALL the work for 4 years and wrote the entire paper, I was slowly bumped down to 10th author in front of my eyes (I was promised 2nd because it was my project but the post doc overseeing it was to get 1st...made sense) and didn't say anything because I didn't know how to approach it. Just as recently as last month I took 3rd author to a younger med student who didn't do nearly as much work as me. I'm sick of being an academic push over and it's past time I learn how to stand up for myself and my work.
I want to break out of this pattern where I do a lot of work and don't get the appropriate credit. How should I address this with my PI? Have others successfully navigated situations like this? How can I phrase this in a professional manner to my PI? Any thoughts?