•  77
    Neutralising fair credit: factors that influence unethical authorship practices
    with Brad S. Trinkle, Trisha Phillips, and Alicia Hall
    Journal of Medical Ethics 43 (6): 368-373. 2017.
    This study experimentally tests whether the techniques of neutralisation as identified in the criminal justice literature influence graduate student willingness to engage in questionable research practices (QRPs). Our results indicate that US-born graduate students are more willing to add an undeserved coauthor if the person who requests it is a faculty member in the student's department as opposed to a fellow student. Students are most likely to add an undeserving author if a faculty member is …Read more
  •  112
    It is unclear whether or not grant winning should count towards authorship credit in the sciences. In this paper, I argue that under certain circumstances grant winning can count for credit as an author on subsequent works. It is a mistake to think that grant winning is always irrelevant to the correct attribution of authorship
  •  79
    Distributed Cognition: Where the Cognitive and the Social Merge
    Social Studies of Science 33 (2): 301--310. 2003.
    Among the many contested boundaries in science studies is that between the cognitive and the social. Here, we are concerned to question this boundary from a perspective within the cognitive sciences based on the notion of distributed cognition. We first present two of many contemporary sources of the notion of distributed cognition, one from the study of artificial neural networks and one from cognitive anthropology. We then proceed to reinterpret two well-known essays by Bruno Latour, ‘Visualizat…Read more
  •  81
    Alternate Accounts of Rationality Invalidate Kaposy's Argument
    American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 1 (4): 43-44. 2010.
    Kaposy (2010) argues that contemporary neuroscience cannot provide rational reasons for abandoning folk psychological concepts like self, personhood, or free will because these concepts are necessa...
  •  53
  •  101
    The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 11, Issue 10, Page 26-27, October 2011
  • Although popular, I argue that the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) account of authorship is flawed. It inadvertently allows for practices that it was designed to prevent. In addition, it creates a new category of authorless papers—orphan papers. The original World Association of Medical Editors (WAME) criterion is preferable.
  •  114
    Not All Human Subjects Research Is Exceptional
    American Journal of Bioethics 10 (8): 62-63. 2010.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  16
    Responsible Authorship: Why Researchers Must Forgo Honorary Authorship
    Accountability in Research 18 (2): 76-90. 2011.
    Although widespread throughout the biomedical sciences, the practice of honorary authorship—the listing of authors who fail to merit inclusion as authors by authorship criteria—has received relatively little sustained attention. Is there something wrong with honorary authorship, or is it only a problem when used in conjunction with other unethical authorship practices like ghostwriting? Numerous sets of authorship guidelines discourage the practice, but its ubiquity throughout biomedicine sugges…Read more