Scholarly gratitude in five geographical contexts: a diachronic and cross-generic approach of the acknowledgment paratext in medical discourse (1950–2010)
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Date
2013-10-07Author
Palabras Clave
Acknowledgments, Medicine, Diachronic, Genre, Research article, Review article, Case reportsMetadata
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This study analyzed the use of acknowledgements in medical articles published
in five countries (Venezuela, Spain, France, UK and USA) from 1950 to 2010. For each
country, we selected 54 papers (18 research papers, 18 reviews and 18 case reports), evenly
distributed over six decades, from two medical journals with the highest impact factors.
Only papers written by native speakers in the national language were included. The
evolution of the frequency and length of acknowledgments was analyzed. Of 270 articles
studied, 127 (47%) had acknowledgments. The presence of acknowledgments was associated
with country (p = 0.001), this section being more common and longer in US and
UK journals. Acknowledgments were most common in research papers (70 vs. 40% in case
reports and 31% in reviews, p\0.001). Reviews without acknowledgments were significantly
more common than those with (69 vs. 31%), but there was no trend in case reports.
Altogether, articles with acknowledgments predominated only after 2000. Since the frequency
of use of acknowledgments remained stable over time in US and UK journals but
increased in non-Anglophone journals, the overall increase is attributed to the change in
non-English publications. Authors acknowledged sub-authorship more in English language
journals than in those published in the national language in France, Spain and Venezuela.
However, the practice of acknowledging is increasing in non-Anglophone journals. We
conclude that the concept of intellectual indebtedness does not only differ from one
geographical context to another, but also over time and from one academic genre to
another.
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Correo Electrónico | Francoise.sm@gmail.com |
Colación | 763–784 |