BACKGROUND
Assessment of authorship contribution is often based on unreliable questionnaires.
OBJECTIVE
To assess if the use of different formats for the disclosure of authorship contributions influences authors’ compliance with
the criteria of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE).
PARTICIPANTS AND MEASUREMENTS
Eight hundred sixty-five authors of 181 manuscripts submitted to the Croatian Medical Journal from January to July 2005 were randomly allocated into 2 groups: 456 authors (94 manuscripts) received an ordinal rating
form to rate their contributions to the submitted manuscript in 12 categories on a scale from 0 (none) to 4 (full), whereas
409 authors (87 manuscripts) received a binary rating form to tick the categories in which they made a contribution.
RESULTS
The ordinal rating form identified twice as many authors (87.9%) as meeting the ICMJE criteria than the binary rating form
(39.2%, P < .001). The group answering the ordinal rating form also had 5 times more manuscripts (71.6%) with all authors meeting the
ICMJE criteria than the binary rating form group (15.5%, P < .001). The fraction of authors who reported contributions on each item on the binary rating form was similar to the fraction
of authors who reported at least moderate participation to the same items on the ordinal rating form except “Final approval
of the article.”
CONCLUSIONS
Ordinal scales for reporting authors’ contributions to manuscripts were more sensitive than tick boxes for assessing the appropriateness
of authorship. The exception is “Final approval of the article,” which should be considered a dichotomous variable and may
not be appropriate for the ICMJE definition of authorship.
KEY WORDS authorship - contribution disclosure form - International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE)