What About My Contribution?
Author(s):
Caroline Whitbeck

Photograph by Lee Jennings
Engineering version
For the first year of your graduate studies, you worked with Professor One on the Hot Research
project. By the end of the first year, you not only became proficient at operating the complex experimental apparatus, but made a small but notable refinement in the approach to the segment assigned to you. At the end of the first year, Professor One went on leave for a semester and you started working on a different project with another supervisor in the same lab.
In the term following Professor One's return from sabbatical, you are told by another student,
who is still working on Hot Research, that he and Professor One are coauthoring a paper that incorporated your refinement.
Are there any ambiguities in the situation?
What, if anything, can and should you do?
Biology version
As a graduate student, you have worked in Professor One's lab on the Hot Research project since
you came here, although your work is largely under the direction of A. R., a postdoc. By the end of the first year, you have not only become proficient at operating the complex experimental apparatus, but made a small but notable refinement in the approach to the segment assigned to you. At that point A. R. leaves the project and the university, and a new postdoc who has been working with another aspect of the project takes an interest in the area in which you had worked with A. R. It is now spring, and you are in the middle of your second year. You hear from another student that the new postdoc is publishing a paper with Professor One on the aspects of Hot Research on which you had worked, incorporating your refinement.
Are there any ambiguities in the situation?
What, if anything, can and should you do?