If someone gets his name second on a paper despite the two contributing the same amount of work and this fact is indicated so, are both authors co-first authors?
Asked
Active
Viewed 4,864 times
0
-
2I don't think so. If both contributed the same, one way to determine the order is by listing the name following the alphabetical order. Also, they can work on another paper and switch order of authors (if possible?) – The Guy Jul 21 '16 at 18:57
-
1Related: Practical implications of noting “equally contributing authors” and Real co-first authors? and Why do people sometimes put authors with equal contribution in non-alphabetical order? – ff524 Jul 21 '16 at 19:15
-
Actually, it's not clear to me what you're asking that isn't already addressed in those other questions. Perhaps you can [edit] your post to clarify. – ff524 Jul 21 '16 at 19:17
-
Im asking if Im a co first author – 123movies Jul 21 '16 at 23:18
-
1@Goldname: Conventions on the significance of author ordering are very different in different fields (e.g. in most areas of mathematics, authors are always ordered alphabetically). So if you could say what field you are in, that would be very helpful. – PLL Jul 21 '16 at 23:35
-
The field is computational biology. Do you have any insiget in this field? – 123movies Jul 22 '16 at 01:38
1 Answers
2
There is only one first author. But the 'prestige' associated with the first author, in certain fields, could be extended to a second author.
An example:
The two authors contributed equally to this work
(source: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1404.7748.pdf)
When cited, this work would be "Najman and Cousty" ("Najman"/"Najman et al" in some contexts, if more than 2 authors), but it is clearly stated that both authors contributed equally, so they both share the 'main author' credit.
(this is the only example I know of this approach, they were my phd advisors - yes, both of them)

Fábio Dias
- 8,732
- 1
- 31
- 55
-
1It's ... not common but not incredibly rare. I'd say in the earth sciences I see it, at a rough guess, on a couple of percent of papers. Occasionally three "these authors contributed equally", not just two; I think usually the equal-contributors are alphabetically ordered but it's not universal. – Andrew is gone Jul 21 '16 at 19:52
-
The problem with alphabetic order (alone) is that, in fields where the order matters, it becomes unclear.... – Fábio Dias Jul 21 '16 at 21:10