For most of the history of grant reporting, the unit of credit has been the author list: a researcher demonstrated productivity by attaching a list of papers on which their name appeared. That is changing. Funders, prompted by the responsible-assessment movement and by the maturing of contribution metadata, are beginning to ask not just what a researcher published but what they actually contributed. This article sets out what that shift looks like and what it asks of applicants and research offices. The practical guidance for working with funders lives at working with funders.
Why funders care about contribution, not just authorship
The move is driven by a simple recognition: an author list is a poor measure of contribution. It does not distinguish the researcher who conceived a study and wrote it from the one whose name was added for status, and it tells a funder nothing about which of an applicant’s many co-authored papers reflect their genuine intellectual leadership. As funders sign up to responsible-assessment commitments such as DORA and the CoARA agreement, and adopt narrative-CV formats that ask applicants to describe their actual role in their best work, structured contribution data becomes the obvious evidence base. The CRediT taxonomy, with its fourteen defined roles, is the contribution vocabulary best placed to supply it.
This is not a hypothetical direction of travel. Narrative-CV formats already ask researchers to articulate their specific contributions rather than list publications, and the natural next step is to back those narratives with the machine-readable contribution data that CRediT and ORCID already carry. A claim that an applicant led the conceptualisation and analysis of a study is far stronger when the published CRediT statement and the applicant’s ORCID record corroborate it.
Where CRediT enters the funding lifecycle
Contribution data has a role at several points in the grant lifecycle, and it helps to see them distinctly:
- At application. Narrative CVs and contribution-aware track-record sections let applicants describe their role using CRediT’s vocabulary, anchored to outputs identified by DOI and to the applicant’s ORCID iD. The funder reads a contribution claim it can corroborate rather than an unweighted publication count.
- During the award. As outputs are produced, their CRediT statements record who on the team did what — useful for the team itself and for the institution tracking the award.
- At reporting and closeout. Final reports increasingly ask for outputs with their contribution context. Where CRediT statements were captured as structured metadata and written to ORCID, much of the report assembles from existing records rather than being reconstructed by hand.
The throughline is that contribution data entered once, in structured form, flows through the whole lifecycle — the same enter-once, reuse-everywhere dividend that structured grant and disclosure data pay across research administration generally.
What this means for applicants
For a researcher, the practical implication is to treat contribution metadata as part of building a fundable track record, not as an afterthought at submission. Concretely:
- Fill in CRediT statements carefully on every paper. The statement you complete today is the contribution evidence you may cite in a grant application tomorrow. An honest, specific statement — one that records you led the conceptualisation, or did the formal analysis — is an asset; a vague or inflated one is a liability.
- Keep your ORCID record current. Funders that read contribution data will read it from your ORCID record and from the published outputs. An up-to-date, auto-updated record is the substrate.
- Write narrative-CV contributions in CRediT’s terms. When a format asks what you contributed, describing it in the recognised roles makes the claim precise and corroborable.
The researcher who fills in contribution statements carefully throughout a career is, without extra effort at the deadline, building the evidence base that contribution-aware funders now reward. The one who treats CRediT as a box to tick has nothing to draw on when the format changes.
What this means for research offices
For the institution, the shift is an argument for capturing contribution data at source. A research office that helps its researchers produce good CRediT statements, write them to ORCID, and surface them in the institution’s research-information system is preparing those researchers for funder requirements before they bite. The alternative — reconstructing contribution claims by hand at each application and report — is exactly the manual-assembly burden that structured metadata exists to remove. Building the pipeline once, so contribution data flows from publication to ORCID to the CRIS to the grant report, is the higher-leverage investment.
An honest caveat: the data must be good enough to bear the weight
It would be misleading to suggest this is frictionless. Contribution statements have known limitations: independent assessors sometimes disagree on which roles apply, and “support” for CRediT at many publishers still means a narrative paragraph rather than structured metadata that propagates to funders. Contribution data is a useful broad signal and a sound basis for narrative claims; it is not a precise score on which fine-grained funding decisions should rest mechanically. Funders adopting it responsibly use it to inform expert judgement, not to replace it — which is exactly the spirit of the responsible-assessment frameworks driving the shift. The right posture is to make the data as good as possible while resisting the temptation to over-interpret it.
Where shared vocabulary fits
For contribution data to travel from a publication into a grant report, the systems along the way must agree on what each role means and how it is encoded. A shared, federated vocabulary that defines the CRediT roles consistently and points back to NISO for the standard is what lets a contribution asserted at publication be read correctly by a funder’s reporting system years later. Supplying that definitional layer is the role the CASRAI dictionary is designed to play; the relevant terms sit in the funding and finance domain.
What to do now
For applicants: complete CRediT statements carefully, keep ORCID current, and write narrative contributions in the recognised roles. For research offices: capture contribution data at source and build the pipeline from publication to ORCID to the CRIS. For funders and standards work: use contribution data to inform expert judgement, and align on shared vocabulary so the data means the same thing end to end.
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