Aug 09
2010
|
|
|
Sign Up to receive free weekly articles like these
Preview of next week's PI eAlert
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Co-author credit after verbal agreement was ignored
Reader Question: Two years ago, I agreed in a conversation with a researcher at another university that I would analyze the composition of some new compounds he created in return for being listed as a co-author of the scientific paper we expected would result. I sent him the results over a year ago, but have heard nothing since, despite my reminders. I was therefore shocked to see in the latest issue of our field’s journal that he has published the paper, including the analysis I made, but I'm not included as co-author nor even mentioned in the acknowledgments. I feel that my team and me deserve formal recognition for our work, as it will help justify the grant money we've spent. Do I have any legal redress? How should I proceed?
Expert comments: This question raises the issue typically referred to as the right of attribution or (more often outside the United States) “moral rights.”
There is no good avenue for legal redress on a national, or federal, level in the United States for this situation. At the U.S. federal level, moral rights were recently provided in the Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 (VARA), which is part of the U.S. Copyright Law, 17 USC § 106A. The VARA grants rights of attribution and integrity to an author. These rights, however, are limited to works of “visual art,” defined as not including "any book, magazine, newspaper, periodical, database, electronic information service, electronic publication or similar publication” (17 USC § 101). Thus VARA does not cover this situation involving the publication of a technical or scientific paper.
Attempts have been made to enforce a right of attribution (co-authorship) under the U.S. Trademark Act (referred to as the “Lanham Act”) on the theory that use of a work without providing attribution or acknowledging authorship constitutes a false “passing off” or a “misappropriation” of the work as one’s own work in violation of the Lanham Act.
In June 2003, however, the Supreme Court interpreted the Lanham Act to deny false-attribution claims as to the origin of a “communicative product.” (Datastar v. Twentieth Century Fox, 123 S.Ct. 2041, 2003).
Attempts also have been made to claim a right of attribution through the laws of defamation, the rights of privacy and publicity, and a common-law doctrine of misappropriation, all generally without success.
If the chemical analysis you describe involve more than simply obtaining and presenting data obtained through running a scientific apparatus, and included commentary and evaluation of the data presented in word form, a claim might be made instead to copyright infringement for unauthorized use of such a write-up.
It is not clear, however, that the use by the fellow researcher of such a write-up would be “unauthorized” when it was provided to the fellow researcher with the understanding that it would be incorporated into the anticipated paper. Further, even if copyright infringement could be shown, the relief that could be obtained would be directed to monetary damages and/or an injunction against future reproduction and use of the write-up. Such remedies would not address the claim of attribution or correcting authorship.
Outside the United States, legal redress for a violation of a right of attribution or moral rights may be obtainable in countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
There is another problem concerning this scenario. It may be questionable that, as a practical matter, you should be identified either as co-author or named in the acknowledgments. Questions have been raised in scientific communities concerning the number of authors on papers and who truly qualifies as an author. There appear to be no definitive guidelines for determining whether someone should be listed as an author on a scientific paper.
The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) has stated that:
“Authorship credits should be based on 1) substantial contributions to conception and design [of the project], or acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation of data; 2) drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content; and 3) final approval of the version to be published. Authors should meet conditions 1, 2, and 3, is the ICMJE’s present definition (www.icmje.org).” (emphasis added).
See, EMBO Reports, “Who Did What?,” Vol. 5, No. 5, page 446 (2004).
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) in its Guidelines for the Conduct of Research in the Intramural Research Program states that “individuals who have assisted in the research by their encouragement and advice or providing space, financial support, reagents, occasional analyses, or patient materials should be acknowledged in the text, but not be authors.”
Someone providing a bench, microscope, or who donated part of their funds toward the research of others might not automatically be granted co-authorship under such NIH guidelines. Under the scenario presented in your question, an argument can be made that the work involving analyzing the composition of some new compounds created by the fellow researcher does not meet these standards or guidelines for authorship credit.
You state that the agreement with the fellow researcher was made in a conversation, as opposed to writing. It would have been better if this agreement had been reduced to writing, even if in the form of an e-mail, including acceptance by the fellow researcher of the terms that you be included as a co-author in the published paper. Then a written contract could be shown to exist. The failure to name you as co-author might then be shown to be a breach of that written contract. A remedy that is obtainable for breach of a contract is specific performance of the terms and obligations of the contract, which in this case might include being named as a co-author.
But even if a legal remedy were available, as a practical matter it may not be the best remedy. In this case, you might instead consider having your lab director or department head contact the lab director or department head at the fellow researcher’s university to discuss the question in a quiet and friendly manner.
Comments by Todd Deveau, JD, partner, Thomas Kayden Horstemeyer & Risley, LLP, an intellectual property law firm in Atlanta.
written by David Harrison, August 02, 2010
written by Unemployed, August 09, 2010
written by Jeff Frelinger, August 09, 2010
written by Mahabir Gupta, August 09, 2010
written by Andrew Zelenetz, August 09, 2010
written by Phalguni Gupta, August 09, 2010
written by Michael E. Abrams, August 09, 2010
written by Patric Lundberg, August 09, 2010
In terms of contacting the Journal - may or may not work. My experience is that journal editors do all they can to avoid having to retract or comment on their own publications. Believe me, we tried, but until the original author did what we asked the journal to do, nothing came of it. The journal cares more about image that ethical behavior, no matter what their policy states.
By all means, email that lead author and tell him/her that you want an answer by X date. If you do not get a response, email the Dept. Chair, then the Journal Editor etc etc. See what happens.
written by Harrison Jones, August 09, 2010
written by Anonymous, August 09, 2010
written by Faculty in MD, August 09, 2010
See what evidence you have (must be some emails) and fedex receipts, notify the dean of reserach integrity and journal editor.
As postdoc I have seen a senior collaborator/PI "adjusting" data. Recently I was booted of a PhD committee after questioning some of the data that were not supportive of the PI's hypothesis.
Even when things are in writing, emails, even MTA's, some people will ignore it and take the credit for themselves. So much for research integrity.
written by Henry Higgins, August 09, 2010
written by Prime investigator, August 09, 2010
If so, you should send the "collaborator" an e-mail, followed up with a formal letter, attaching copies of the communication that set up the initial collaboration, along with proof that the data originated in your lab (i.e., raw data, etc.). Both the e-mail and the letter should be cc'd to the person's chairman, Dean, and the journal in which it appeared. It is also worth considering notifying any grant agency involved. This is inexcusable-- even if it was just an oversight..... your data has been effectively stolen, and your own record of productivity decreased. An erratum correction will not do anything other than have your name associated with an erratum-- your name will not be on the published article.
These incidents need a hammer blow, not a gentle kick--- there are too many honest, hard-working folks competing for limited funds and no good reason to not weed out the others.
written by Observer, August 09, 2010
Written agreements for these sorts of things rarely exist as these collaborations are performed in good faith. If you ask a potential future collaborator for a contract sort of letter or e-mail, it just sends the wrong signals from the beginning.
If the omission was genuinely intentional, then you simply have to decide whether to chalk it up to experience or "get revenge" by calling the department chair etc. but your own name would be co authored through that mud too so it may not be worth it. You are always free to tell your other scientific colleagues for what you think of him/her as a collaborator as long as you speak the absolute truth.
written by Maria G Castro, August 09, 2010
I wrote to the journal editor explaining the situation and sending him proof of my contribution to the paper. The editor withdrew the manuscript and in agreement with the senior aurthor, he included my mane as co-author.
Good luck
Maria
written by Anonymous, August 09, 2010
written by Douglas R. Anderson, August 09, 2010
None-the-less, if the agreement was that you would be a participating author, then the leader of the project in essence takes the responsibility to keep you in the loop about the project as a whole, and provide you with a final manuscript for your approval (you don't want your name on a paper if you don't agree with how the data were interpreted and with the conclusions drawn). Failing that degree of involvement, because your contribution was a small proportion of the total effort, then in my view it should at least be mentioned in the materials and methods section or in the acknowledgements that the chemical characterization was kindly done by the collaborative effort of Dr. XYZ. Moreover, if the work was done in your lab supported by a grant, the title page should state that the work was supported in part by A, B, and grant R01-XXX awarded by NNN to Dr. XYZ.
So, one way or another, your participation was not recognized. You were not given credit. The authors lost the opportunity to have faith in the quality of that chemical characterization by knowing who did it, etc.
Now, what to do? Well, first, it seems to me a phone call or e-mail message to your colleague might be in order to find out what happened to the agreement that your participation would be acknowledged through co-authorship, or if the participation in the much larger project was not large enough for co-authorship, why you were not at least acknowledged. If he recognizes an error on his part, howefully inadvertent, then discuss how to resolve the issue. Perhaps there will be soon a follow-up with further analysis of the same data, and you can be included as co-author with recognition in the materials and methods that you had performed the characterization of the molecules as reported previusly (reference), and now further analysis of the data is being presented.
On the other hand, if his attitude is defensive and unfreindly, you can write a letter to his chairman. You can also write a letter to the editor (for publication) in which you state that while not mentioned, it was you who characterized the compounds and there is a slight error in the report with regard to the raw data, or in the way it was integrated with the other data, or in the way it was interpreted, etc. Such a letter to the editor might usually be published, especiallly if the conclusions are affected, along with a public answer by the authors of the original paper. Your letter is a citable publication, and gives reference to the origianl paper so scholars following the subject can find it with the knowledge that you contributed. The forgetful author will have the opportunity to write a reply that you won't see until it is published, so don't put anything in your letter that is open to criticism of not understanding the main points of the original work, etc.
Otherwise, getting into accusations of intentional fraud, etc., will just get mud on everyone. It would be better to move on. I have heard scientists who have had their ideas or even data stolen say, if X needs my ideas to write a paper, fine. I have plenty more he is not capable of coming up with.
written by Robert E. Hurst, August 09, 2010
written by Philip Gerrish, August 09, 2010
written by Frederick Sweet, August 09, 2010
"As a general working definition, ORI considers plagiarism to include both the theft or misappropriation of intellectual property and the substantial unattributed textual copying of another's work. It does not include authorship or credit disputes.
The theft or misappropriation of intellectual property includes the unauthorized use of ideas or unique methods obtained by a privileged communication, such as a grant or manuscript review.
Substantial unattributed textual copying of another's work means the unattributed verbatim or nearly verbatim copying of sentences and paragraphs which materially mislead the ordinary reader regarding the contributions of the author(s)."
http://ori.dhhs.gov/policies/plagiarism.shtml
I imagine the NSF and other agencies handling Federal funds subscribe to similar principles.
If I were the offended author, I'd begin by contacting the ORI which will be happy to point him/them in the right direction for blowing the whistle on the perpetrators.
Stealing data and interpretation of the data is a form of plagiarism. It is certainly scientifiic misconduct.
Sticking one's scientific head in the sand is not always the best approach to dealing with misconduct. How on earth can the standards be enforced if everyone turns away from trying to improve the scientific community?
written by Anonymous, August 09, 2010
This may not have completely resolved the problem that had occurred but I bet the colleague never 'forgets' again. BTW, I have seen her at conferences since and always treat her kindly. It is important to let the past rest and move on.
written by Dr. Fred, August 09, 2010
written by D.S., August 10, 2010
1)cultural/legal view: in Europe (in particular in Germany) a spoken word has the same power as the written word: giving a promise of beeing mentioned/authorship but not doing so later is a false statement which can be punished by law (criminal law: 3 months up to 5 years); but this "cultural agreement" might depent on the cultural/country background which is different in other countries;
2) moral view: those "co-workers" will isolate themself, as science is "self-sufficient" but needs communication of scientits - and in long time view nobody will work with those "co-workers" nore they will be funded and journals will refuse those authors in future (if the journal editors got the relevant information); it's like expressing sientific misconduct to the "co-worker", which will be proofed.
But incependend of these aspects, the deceived person has to give evidence of the facts and should be "strong" for incoming attacts form other sides, otherwise nothing will happen.
written by Samuel M. Aguayo, MD, August 10, 2010
written by Paul Chuba, August 10, 2010
Watson and Crick used Wilkins's data, part of which came from coworker Rosalind Franklin, to create a three-dimensional model of the DNA molecule. The model included known facts, such as the chemical constituents (nitrogen bases, sugar, and phosphate), and took into account data from Wilkins's X-ray diffraction experiments.
written by Paul Chuba, August 10, 2010
written by [email protected], August 10, 2010
I also threated to contact the journal and cause trouble with plagiarism. Some journals will ban individuals or entire universities from publishing for a period of years if plagiarism is stablished.
written by Dr. Fred, August 10, 2010
written by anon- Louisiana, August 10, 2010
written by Allen Hunter, August 17, 2010
written by Denis English, Ph.D., August 23, 2010
written by who cares, September 20, 2010
written by Faculty of Pharmacy and Biochemistry, University of Buenos Aires, September 28, 2010
written by Anonymously yours, November 30, 2010