Jana, and her coauthor, Jennifer Shu, say parents also worry about crossed eyes.
From the edition.cnn.com
Jean Sibonga, NASA bone discipline lead at Johnson and coauthor of the study.
From the sciencedaily.com
Cleeman, who is a coauthor of the latest study, noted that more progress is needed.
From the sciencedaily.com
It also incorrectly described Darla Zelenitsky as the coauthor of the paper.
From the science.time.com
Nelson is coauthor and a professor at the University of Leeds's School of Healthcare.
From the theepochtimes.com
He is also coauthor, with TIME's Strobe Talbott, of the new book Reagan and Gorbachev.
From the time.com
When clicked, it makes an authorlink using the name of the final coauthor.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Graduate student John Ten Hoeve contributed to the research and is coauthor of the paper.
From the sciencedaily.com
The fifth coauthor is Sukanya Chakrabarti at Florida Atlantic University.
From the sciencedaily.com
More examples
A writer who collaborates with others in writing something
The term collaborative writing refers to projects where written works are created by multiple people together (collaboratively) rather than individually. Some projects are overseen by an editor or editorial team, but many grow without any of this top-down oversight. ...
A member of either house who joins the principal author in the sponsorship of a measure. (See also "Author".)
Co-Authors are further authors of a contribution who have not themselves submitted the work. They can also be informed of the result of the review process via e-mail. ...
One who shares authorship of a work. Coauthors all have bylines. Coauthors share royalties based on their contributions to the book. (compare to: ghostwriter)
A collaborator on a book, story, or article who receives byline credit.