publication page by clicking on the publication's title 2. Click on the arrow to the right of the title and select Claim authorship from the drop-down list 3. Select the name you published with or click Add name. A box will appear so that you can add additional information 4. Click on the blue Request authorship button. We take erroneous authorship claims very seriously and review each case manually. As this can sometimes take a while, we appreciate your patience during this process. Note: We do not currently add collaborators, translators, consortiums or signatories to the author lists of publications unless their names are explicitly stated on the full-text of the publication in the main author list. We are working on a better way to represent the contributions that researchers in this position have made to these publications. For edited books, where the editors' names appear on the cover but the chapters have variable authorship, editors can confirm authorship of the entire book while chapter authors can confirm authorship of their individual chapters. For conference proceedings, editors may appear in the author list, while individual conference papers and their authors should be added separately as individual publications. The suggested publications are not mineResearchGate's authorship suggestions are designed to help you claim your publications as effectively as possible. You can always click This is not me if the publication is not yours, which will help the algorithm we use to make a more informed suggestion the next time. You’ll find the page where you can click This is not me here: https://www.researchgate.net/profile.ProfileAuthorClusterClaim.html The best advice we can offer at this time is to keep declining authorship of articles that are not yours. The algorithm, as a result, becomes 'smarter' and chooses fewer publications to be sent your way. ResearchGate's extensive publication database is compiled using publicly available metadata from other literature databases, including PubMed, NASA, and CiteSeer. The ResearchGate community also contributes to our publications database, by uploading publications manually. As a result, there may be times where we suggest a publication that you already have on your profile or publications with incorrect metadata. For publications that you authored with incorrect metadata, you can edit the publication after you've claimed it.
For duplicates, ResearchGate automatically merges items where all information is identical, including title, date of publication, author list, and journal. This is how you can edit the items so that they merge automatically: - Go to the publication’s ResearchGate page by clicking on the title of the publication
- Click on the blue arrow on the right-hand side of the page and select Edit from the drop-down list
- Make the necessary changes
- Click Save.
Please note: It can take up to 72 hours for the publications to be merged. If you have duplicates and prefer to delete one of them, simply do so by following our instructions on removing research. The best way to add, edit, or remove co-author information from a publication is to: Go to
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