Exponential authorship inflation in neuroscience and psychology from the 1950s to the 2020s.

IF 12.3 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY American Psychologist Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-30 DOI:10.1037/amp0001216
Zhicheng Lin, Shangzhi Lu
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Abstract

How many researchers does it take to publish an article in top journals in neuroscience and psychology? Manually coding 42,580 articles spanning 1879-2021 from 32 journals, we examined the evolution of authorship size and its rate of change. Moreover, we assessed the driving forces behind these changes. We found that, starting from the 1950s but not earlier, the average authorship size per article in neuroscience and psychology has increased exponentially, growing by 50% and 31% over the last decade and reaching a record high of 10.4 and 4.8 authors in 2021, respectively. Single-authored articles have become a rarity today, particularly in primary research articles: 1.7% in neuroscience and 2.2% in psychology in 2019-2021 (vs. 5.7% and 11.2% in review articles). With the withering of sole authors rises a new type of authorship, group authors (e.g., a consortium). Group authorship was rare before 2000, but in 2019-2021, it appeared in 4.1% of articles in neuroscience, mostly in genetics, neuroimaging, and disease-outnumbering single-authored articles for the first time-and 0.7% in psychology, mostly in developmental and clinical research. The exponential inflation in authorship size could not be attributed to behaviors of professional editors in profit-oriented journals but aligns with a hybrid epistemic-behavioral-cultural account-an account that integrates multidimensional factors, including increased research complexity, the benefits of collaboration, the rise of government-funded research, changing norms in authorship practices, and biased incentives in evaluation. These findings suggest troubling implications for research reproducibility, innovations, equity/diversity, and ethics, calling for policy deliberations to address potential negative ramifications. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

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从20世纪50年代到21世纪20年代,神经科学和心理学的作者数量呈指数级膨胀。
在神经科学和心理学的顶级期刊上发表一篇文章需要多少研究人员?我们对32种期刊1879年至2021年间的42580篇文章进行了手工编码,研究了作者数量的演变及其变化率。此外,我们还评估了这些变化背后的驱动力。我们发现,从20世纪50年代开始(而不是更早),神经科学和心理学领域每篇文章的平均作者数量呈指数级增长,在过去十年中增长了50%和31%,并在2021年分别达到创纪录的10.4和4.8位作者。如今,单作者论文已经变得罕见,尤其是在初级研究论文中:2019-2021年,神经科学论文占1.7%,心理学论文占2.2%(相比之下,综述文章占5.7%和11.2%)。随着单独作者的消亡,一种新型的作者身份出现了,即团体作者(例如,一个财团)。在2000年之前,群体合著很少见,但在2019-2021年,它出现在神经科学领域4.1%的文章中,主要是遗传学、神经影像学和疾病领域,首次超过了单一作者的文章,在心理学领域,这一比例为0.7%,主要是在发育和临床研究领域。作者数量的指数膨胀不能归因于以利润为导向的期刊的专业编辑的行为,而是与认知-行为-文化的混合解释相一致,这种解释整合了多维因素,包括研究复杂性的增加、合作的好处、政府资助研究的兴起、作者行为规范的改变以及评估中的偏见激励。这些发现对研究可重复性、创新、公平/多样性和伦理提出了令人不安的影响,呼吁进行政策审议,以解决潜在的负面影响。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2023 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
American Psychologist
American Psychologist PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
18.50
自引率
1.20%
发文量
145
期刊介绍: Established in 1946, American Psychologist® is the flagship peer-reviewed scholarly journal of the American Psychological Association. It publishes high-impact papers of broad interest, including empirical reports, meta-analyses, and scholarly reviews, covering psychological science, practice, education, and policy. Articles often address issues of national and international significance within the field of psychology and its relationship to society. Published in an accessible style, contributions in American Psychologist are designed to be understood by both psychologists and the general public.
期刊最新文献
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