@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ After these stages have been considered, one or a combination of the below [repo
...
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ After these stages have been considered, one or a combination of the below [repo
## Contributor attribution
## Contributor attribution
Before you publish your data you should have an open and honest conversation about who has contributed to the data collection and processing, and agree how these individuals will be recognised and attributed for their work. This need not be the same list of individuals who are authors on any manuscript which references your data, indeed this can be a valuable opportunity to recognise the contributions of those who do not traditionally receive authorship on journal manuscripts (for example project managers, software engineers or data stewards).
Before you publish your data you should have an open and honest conversation about who has contributed to the data collection and processing, and agree how these individuals will be recognised and attributed for their work. This need not be the same list of individuals who are authors on any manuscript which references your data, indeed this can be a valuable opportunity to recognise the contributions of those who do not traditionally receive authorship on journal manuscripts (for example project managers, software engineers or data stewards).
Consider creating a [Contributor Roles Taxonomy - CRediT](https://casrai.org/credit/) statement and sharing this with your published data. [Tenzing](https://rollercoaster.shinyapps.io/tenzing/) is a useful tool for collecting contributor information and generating the CRediT statement.
Consider creating a [Contributor Roles Taxonomy - CRediT](https://credit.niso.org) statement and sharing this with your published data. [Tenzing](https://rollercoaster.shinyapps.io/tenzing/) is a useful tool for collecting contributor information and generating the CRediT statement.
Aim to include the [ORCID](https://orcid.org) of all your contributors in your published metadata, so contributions can be traced back to the individual.
Aim to include the [ORCID](https://orcid.org) of all your contributors in your published metadata, so contributions can be traced back to the individual.