Ann Med. 2026 Dec;58(1):
2625580
AIM: Authorship is a key marker for academic achievement, yet its integrity is increasingly compromised by "free riding," whereby individuals are listed as co-authors without making any substantive contributions. This commentary examines the nature, drivers, and ethical implications of free riding in academic publishing and proposes strategies to promote fairness, accountability, and integrity in authorship practices.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: This commentary draws on existing literature, international authorship guidelines (including those of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors), and ethical frameworks in scholarly publishing. Through narrative analysis, it explores the characteristics, motivations, and consequences of free riding in authorship, with particular attention to institutional, cultural, and power-related influences. Emerging challenges related to Generative Artificial Intelligence and authorship integrity are also examined.
RESULTS: Five primary forms of free riding in authorship are identified: coercive, reciprocal, gratitude, purchased, and entitlement authorship. These practices are driven by pressures to publish, increasing multi-authorship, ambiguous authorship norms, and incentive structures that prioritize quantity over quality. Despite established guidelines, honorary and coercive authorship persist, undermining accountability and trust in scholarly communication. The use of Generative Artificial Intelligence introduces additional complexities regarding contribution attribution and authorship legitimacy. Institutions and journals play a critical role in addressing these issues through clear authorship policies, transparent contribution tracking (e.g., the CRediT taxonomy), ethical training, mentorship, and technologies that verify individual contributions.
CONCLUSION: Free riding in academic authorship represents an ethical challenge that threatens the credibility, fairness, and trustworthiness of scientific knowledge. Addressing this issue requires coordinated reform across institutions, journals, and researcher training. By strengthening accountability mechanisms, and fostering a culture of ethical authorship, the academic community can ensure that authorship accurately reflects genuine intellectual and practical contributions. Confronting free riding in academic publishing is essential not only for maintaining ethical integrity and fairness but also for preserving public trust and the validity of scientific knowledge.
Keywords: Authorship; academic publications; accountability; ethics; free riders; free riding; medical education research; scientific journals