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Should my PhD thesis be submitted under my legal name?

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Should my PhD thesis be submitted under my legal name?


Can I include under-review content in my PhD Thesis?Which term is correct for a work submitted for a master's degree: paper, thesis or dissertation?Editor rejected my paper stating that reviewers had refused to review it long after submission; How can I understand what is wrong with my paper?How detailed should proofs be in a mathematical PhD thesis?Is it okay/common/good to mention the submitted papers in my phd thesis?What should I do, as my submitted paper is still under review after 1 year?Is it possible to keep publishing under my professional (maiden) name, different from my married legal name?Phd Thesis WritingLicensing under author name?Using an image under Creative Commons license in PhD thesis













21















I married during my PhD and changed my legal surname however (for many reasons) I will continue to publish under my maiden name. My (UK) university says that a thesis has to be submitted under the name held in registration records. They seem happy for me to revert my registration to my maiden name so I can submit my thesis as "maiden name" and this means my degree certificate will also have "maiden name".
I think it would make more sense to have the name on the thesis the same as on the published papers that it contains (i.e. maiden name) but would there be any issues with graduating with an old name? I do have birth & marriage certificates that show my maiden name.










share|improve this question







New contributor




Ali is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1





    In Poland, one can keep her maiden name as a part of her new legal name. Can't you do the same? It is especially popular among female scientists for the very reason you stated - publishing under the same name after getting married. But I don't know if it's legal in UK (and your home country if it is different than UK).

    – Mołot
    20 hours ago








  • 5





    I find the titular question confusing. It doesn't seem like you have an option there. It's a legal thing you either publish PhD under your legal name or get a diploma for a maiden name. Academia per se doesn't care, but a PhD diploma is an administrative thing. Could you publish as "Ali Newsurname nee Maidensurname"? Officially it would be your legal name, but from editorial point of view it would be as close as possible to your academic "pen name". It would also make references to your papers obvious.

    – luk32
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you clarify what jurisdiction you are in? The notion of a “legal name” is jurisdiction-specific.

    – owjburnham
    17 hours ago






  • 1





    @Ali There is no requirement in English law to use a deed poll to change your name (although many institutions require documentary evidence of a name, which a deed poll would provide). There is also no requirement for a woman to change her name on marriage; a birth certificate would provide evidence of the original name.

    – Martin Bonner
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    @Mołot The marriage has already happened and the married name has already been chosen.

    – David Richerby
    13 hours ago
















21















I married during my PhD and changed my legal surname however (for many reasons) I will continue to publish under my maiden name. My (UK) university says that a thesis has to be submitted under the name held in registration records. They seem happy for me to revert my registration to my maiden name so I can submit my thesis as "maiden name" and this means my degree certificate will also have "maiden name".
I think it would make more sense to have the name on the thesis the same as on the published papers that it contains (i.e. maiden name) but would there be any issues with graduating with an old name? I do have birth & marriage certificates that show my maiden name.










share|improve this question







New contributor




Ali is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1





    In Poland, one can keep her maiden name as a part of her new legal name. Can't you do the same? It is especially popular among female scientists for the very reason you stated - publishing under the same name after getting married. But I don't know if it's legal in UK (and your home country if it is different than UK).

    – Mołot
    20 hours ago








  • 5





    I find the titular question confusing. It doesn't seem like you have an option there. It's a legal thing you either publish PhD under your legal name or get a diploma for a maiden name. Academia per se doesn't care, but a PhD diploma is an administrative thing. Could you publish as "Ali Newsurname nee Maidensurname"? Officially it would be your legal name, but from editorial point of view it would be as close as possible to your academic "pen name". It would also make references to your papers obvious.

    – luk32
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you clarify what jurisdiction you are in? The notion of a “legal name” is jurisdiction-specific.

    – owjburnham
    17 hours ago






  • 1





    @Ali There is no requirement in English law to use a deed poll to change your name (although many institutions require documentary evidence of a name, which a deed poll would provide). There is also no requirement for a woman to change her name on marriage; a birth certificate would provide evidence of the original name.

    – Martin Bonner
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    @Mołot The marriage has already happened and the married name has already been chosen.

    – David Richerby
    13 hours ago














21












21








21


2






I married during my PhD and changed my legal surname however (for many reasons) I will continue to publish under my maiden name. My (UK) university says that a thesis has to be submitted under the name held in registration records. They seem happy for me to revert my registration to my maiden name so I can submit my thesis as "maiden name" and this means my degree certificate will also have "maiden name".
I think it would make more sense to have the name on the thesis the same as on the published papers that it contains (i.e. maiden name) but would there be any issues with graduating with an old name? I do have birth & marriage certificates that show my maiden name.










share|improve this question







New contributor




Ali is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I married during my PhD and changed my legal surname however (for many reasons) I will continue to publish under my maiden name. My (UK) university says that a thesis has to be submitted under the name held in registration records. They seem happy for me to revert my registration to my maiden name so I can submit my thesis as "maiden name" and this means my degree certificate will also have "maiden name".
I think it would make more sense to have the name on the thesis the same as on the published papers that it contains (i.e. maiden name) but would there be any issues with graduating with an old name? I do have birth & marriage certificates that show my maiden name.







publications phd thesis university






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share|improve this question







New contributor




Ali is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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asked 21 hours ago









AliAli

10614




10614




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Check out our Code of Conduct.






Ali is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1





    In Poland, one can keep her maiden name as a part of her new legal name. Can't you do the same? It is especially popular among female scientists for the very reason you stated - publishing under the same name after getting married. But I don't know if it's legal in UK (and your home country if it is different than UK).

    – Mołot
    20 hours ago








  • 5





    I find the titular question confusing. It doesn't seem like you have an option there. It's a legal thing you either publish PhD under your legal name or get a diploma for a maiden name. Academia per se doesn't care, but a PhD diploma is an administrative thing. Could you publish as "Ali Newsurname nee Maidensurname"? Officially it would be your legal name, but from editorial point of view it would be as close as possible to your academic "pen name". It would also make references to your papers obvious.

    – luk32
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you clarify what jurisdiction you are in? The notion of a “legal name” is jurisdiction-specific.

    – owjburnham
    17 hours ago






  • 1





    @Ali There is no requirement in English law to use a deed poll to change your name (although many institutions require documentary evidence of a name, which a deed poll would provide). There is also no requirement for a woman to change her name on marriage; a birth certificate would provide evidence of the original name.

    – Martin Bonner
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    @Mołot The marriage has already happened and the married name has already been chosen.

    – David Richerby
    13 hours ago














  • 1





    In Poland, one can keep her maiden name as a part of her new legal name. Can't you do the same? It is especially popular among female scientists for the very reason you stated - publishing under the same name after getting married. But I don't know if it's legal in UK (and your home country if it is different than UK).

    – Mołot
    20 hours ago








  • 5





    I find the titular question confusing. It doesn't seem like you have an option there. It's a legal thing you either publish PhD under your legal name or get a diploma for a maiden name. Academia per se doesn't care, but a PhD diploma is an administrative thing. Could you publish as "Ali Newsurname nee Maidensurname"? Officially it would be your legal name, but from editorial point of view it would be as close as possible to your academic "pen name". It would also make references to your papers obvious.

    – luk32
    18 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you clarify what jurisdiction you are in? The notion of a “legal name” is jurisdiction-specific.

    – owjburnham
    17 hours ago






  • 1





    @Ali There is no requirement in English law to use a deed poll to change your name (although many institutions require documentary evidence of a name, which a deed poll would provide). There is also no requirement for a woman to change her name on marriage; a birth certificate would provide evidence of the original name.

    – Martin Bonner
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    @Mołot The marriage has already happened and the married name has already been chosen.

    – David Richerby
    13 hours ago








1




1





In Poland, one can keep her maiden name as a part of her new legal name. Can't you do the same? It is especially popular among female scientists for the very reason you stated - publishing under the same name after getting married. But I don't know if it's legal in UK (and your home country if it is different than UK).

– Mołot
20 hours ago







In Poland, one can keep her maiden name as a part of her new legal name. Can't you do the same? It is especially popular among female scientists for the very reason you stated - publishing under the same name after getting married. But I don't know if it's legal in UK (and your home country if it is different than UK).

– Mołot
20 hours ago






5




5





I find the titular question confusing. It doesn't seem like you have an option there. It's a legal thing you either publish PhD under your legal name or get a diploma for a maiden name. Academia per se doesn't care, but a PhD diploma is an administrative thing. Could you publish as "Ali Newsurname nee Maidensurname"? Officially it would be your legal name, but from editorial point of view it would be as close as possible to your academic "pen name". It would also make references to your papers obvious.

– luk32
18 hours ago





I find the titular question confusing. It doesn't seem like you have an option there. It's a legal thing you either publish PhD under your legal name or get a diploma for a maiden name. Academia per se doesn't care, but a PhD diploma is an administrative thing. Could you publish as "Ali Newsurname nee Maidensurname"? Officially it would be your legal name, but from editorial point of view it would be as close as possible to your academic "pen name". It would also make references to your papers obvious.

– luk32
18 hours ago




1




1





Could you clarify what jurisdiction you are in? The notion of a “legal name” is jurisdiction-specific.

– owjburnham
17 hours ago





Could you clarify what jurisdiction you are in? The notion of a “legal name” is jurisdiction-specific.

– owjburnham
17 hours ago




1




1





@Ali There is no requirement in English law to use a deed poll to change your name (although many institutions require documentary evidence of a name, which a deed poll would provide). There is also no requirement for a woman to change her name on marriage; a birth certificate would provide evidence of the original name.

– Martin Bonner
15 hours ago





@Ali There is no requirement in English law to use a deed poll to change your name (although many institutions require documentary evidence of a name, which a deed poll would provide). There is also no requirement for a woman to change her name on marriage; a birth certificate would provide evidence of the original name.

– Martin Bonner
15 hours ago




1




1





@Mołot The marriage has already happened and the married name has already been chosen.

– David Richerby
13 hours ago





@Mołot The marriage has already happened and the married name has already been chosen.

– David Richerby
13 hours ago










6 Answers
6






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34














You need to pick a name that you'll use in your professional life. Changing that name has a cost. At this early stage, the cost is low. So, if you want to use your married name professionally, then change to it now. Otherwise, use your maiden name for the duration of your career. (This isn't to say you can't switch later, just that the cost increases over time.)




would there be any issues with graduating with an old name?




It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours (given that it won't match your legal name).






share|improve this answer



















  • 3





    It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours - I think this is not at all an issue in Western academia, nor if one goes to industry/government/etc.

    – Kimball
    17 hours ago






  • 7





    @Kimball Regardless, it is a slight burden?

    – user2768
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    @Kathy I suppose that depends how you quantify burden. Changing later might reduce the lifetime burden, because after graduation there is less life. That said, degree certificates probably won't be required later in life, so the period of disruption is perhaps fixed. I'm not sure whether these details are particularly useful. Crucially, changing a name later has a higher impact on professional life, since a name is essentially a brand, which (hopefully) improves over time.

    – user2768
    15 hours ago








  • 3





    @user2768 I'm not in academia, but my employer in Switzerland wanted my O-level certificates from 1974 (as well as my degree certificate). (If you are not familiar with the British education system, O-levels were the muggle equivalent of OWLs.)

    – Martin Bonner
    14 hours ago






  • 5





    @Ali If they regularly ask for it, why aren't they used to people (women especially) changing their names?

    – Azor Ahai
    13 hours ago



















9














Your thesis is a publication, and unless you have strong reasons to do so otherwise, I would recommend that you use the same name in all your publications ─ be they theses or papers.



I would particularly recommend that you do not pay attention to the oft-propagated myth that "nobody reads PhD theses". For one, it's simply not true (at best, it is field-dependent), but more importantly, it is irrelevant. Regardless of whether people read your thesis or not, it will appear in both your CV and other publication lists (Google Scholar, ReseracherId and ORCID, at the very least). I think the core question there is: what name will you use at the head of your CV?




  • If you'll use your maiden name, with only an incidental mention of your legal name when required, then it makes no sense to have any publications under your legal name.

  • If the header will be your legal name, then it still doesn't make sense to have some publications with a different, maiden name (the papers) and some with the legal name. You still have to design around the use of two different names, and using the legal name for the thesis only complicates that design even more.


I was under a roughly similar situation, where my UK university required a legal name for the PhD thesis that differed from the name I use for papers (specifically, I left out the maternal surname), and I can tell you that the legal name did propagate to places where I would rather have one single unified front.



More importantly, though, I think that the key distinction is that the PhD diploma and the PhD thesis will be seen by two drastically different audiences.




  • The PhD diploma will probably only be seen by Human Resources staff, or their equivalents, who are trained to deal with this, and for whom person-changed-their-name-through-marriage is a run-of-the-mill type of feature. Having a legal name that differs from that on your PhD diploma, with a marriage certificate to match, won't even raise an eyebrow.


  • The PhD thesis, and particularly its bibliographic details, will be seen by a lot more people, and they will have a lot less incentive to care about the details - it's more likely to confuse them and they're much less likely to chase it up to figure it out.





After having said all of which, though: It's your name. It's your choice. Consider all the points that everyone has mentioned here, but do what feels right to you.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    This is not just a normal publication. It is a legal document and the name under that document must follow the local laws! It is not something automatic to use any other than the official legal name and I would certainly not do that without consulting the appropriate office of the university. There is nothing definitive strangers on the internet can say for sure.

    – Vladimir F
    9 hours ago













  • @Vladimir OP reports having consulted with their university's registry. Are you suggesting that they shouldn't be believed?

    – E.P.
    7 hours ago











  • @VladimirF This may vary by jurisdiction but in most places a disertation is not a "legal document", at least not in the sense that something like a contract or birth certificate is. And while you should virtually always follow local laws, most places do not have laws regarding the name you publish under.

    – TimothyAWiseman
    6 hours ago













  • @TimothyAWiseman The situation is different in large parts of Europe. When a thesis is a legal requirement for completing a degree, it's not just any publication.

    – Jouni Sirén
    3 hours ago



















3














It probably doesn't matter much as few people will look into your thesis at all (at least those people interested in your research). They will rather look at your papers.



My feeling is that it is better to have all/most of your legal documents under the same name. That is, if you plan to use your new name as your legal name (not for your publications) then it would make sense to have your PhD. diploma also under this name. But I guess most people will manage with diplomas with two names if you explain it to them.






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  • Could the downvoter please explain?

    – Guest
    13 hours ago



















2














There is one more point for using your maiden name.
Maiden name is yours forever. Your married name may change.
If you publish under your married name now, and re-marry later, you will be stuck with your ex's last name.






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    1














    The legal position in the UK is quite different to that in many other jurisdictions. In English common law your name is that by which you are generally known. It follows that, if you wish, you can change your name as often as you change your hat. Now, you might be asked to provide evidence that your name is what you say it is: as the UK government website puts it:" You do not have to follow a legal process to start using a new name. But you might need a ‘deed poll’ to apply for or to change official documents like your passport or driving licence."



    So, from a legal point of view in the UK there is no such thing as your "legal" name. In the academic world just use the name by which you wish to be known in that world. It might be very convenient to continue to use the name that is used on your various degree certificates, but if you don't want to do that just drop a line to the awarding institution to say that your name has changed.






    share|improve this answer































      0














      For your thesis it will not really matter at all as the thesis itself will not be read by many people (sad truth!) (and if you have to proof somewhere that you are the person who holds this degree you can always provide the marriage certificate in addition).



      It is however very important that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on many numerical descriptors (e.g. H-index) and this will be very difficult if you publish under 2 different names. If this is your maiden name or your current one is up to you.






      share|improve this answer








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      • 3





        Let me add that there is something more important than "that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on" namely that you should publish under a name you can identify with. Your wellbeing is far more important than your career!!! For what it's worth, I recently changed my name and do not want to be refereed under my previous name, no matter how good this would be for my "career".

        – Guest
        16 hours ago






      • 1





        @Guest +1 for "Your wellbeing is far more important than your career"

        – JeffE
        15 hours ago











      • Yes, right the "well-being" overrules possibly everything said before ;-)

        – lordy
        15 hours ago










      protected by StrongBad 11 hours ago



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      6 Answers
      6






      active

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      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

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      active

      oldest

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      34














      You need to pick a name that you'll use in your professional life. Changing that name has a cost. At this early stage, the cost is low. So, if you want to use your married name professionally, then change to it now. Otherwise, use your maiden name for the duration of your career. (This isn't to say you can't switch later, just that the cost increases over time.)




      would there be any issues with graduating with an old name?




      It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours (given that it won't match your legal name).






      share|improve this answer



















      • 3





        It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours - I think this is not at all an issue in Western academia, nor if one goes to industry/government/etc.

        – Kimball
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        @Kimball Regardless, it is a slight burden?

        – user2768
        17 hours ago






      • 2





        @Kathy I suppose that depends how you quantify burden. Changing later might reduce the lifetime burden, because after graduation there is less life. That said, degree certificates probably won't be required later in life, so the period of disruption is perhaps fixed. I'm not sure whether these details are particularly useful. Crucially, changing a name later has a higher impact on professional life, since a name is essentially a brand, which (hopefully) improves over time.

        – user2768
        15 hours ago








      • 3





        @user2768 I'm not in academia, but my employer in Switzerland wanted my O-level certificates from 1974 (as well as my degree certificate). (If you are not familiar with the British education system, O-levels were the muggle equivalent of OWLs.)

        – Martin Bonner
        14 hours ago






      • 5





        @Ali If they regularly ask for it, why aren't they used to people (women especially) changing their names?

        – Azor Ahai
        13 hours ago
















      34














      You need to pick a name that you'll use in your professional life. Changing that name has a cost. At this early stage, the cost is low. So, if you want to use your married name professionally, then change to it now. Otherwise, use your maiden name for the duration of your career. (This isn't to say you can't switch later, just that the cost increases over time.)




      would there be any issues with graduating with an old name?




      It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours (given that it won't match your legal name).






      share|improve this answer



















      • 3





        It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours - I think this is not at all an issue in Western academia, nor if one goes to industry/government/etc.

        – Kimball
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        @Kimball Regardless, it is a slight burden?

        – user2768
        17 hours ago






      • 2





        @Kathy I suppose that depends how you quantify burden. Changing later might reduce the lifetime burden, because after graduation there is less life. That said, degree certificates probably won't be required later in life, so the period of disruption is perhaps fixed. I'm not sure whether these details are particularly useful. Crucially, changing a name later has a higher impact on professional life, since a name is essentially a brand, which (hopefully) improves over time.

        – user2768
        15 hours ago








      • 3





        @user2768 I'm not in academia, but my employer in Switzerland wanted my O-level certificates from 1974 (as well as my degree certificate). (If you are not familiar with the British education system, O-levels were the muggle equivalent of OWLs.)

        – Martin Bonner
        14 hours ago






      • 5





        @Ali If they regularly ask for it, why aren't they used to people (women especially) changing their names?

        – Azor Ahai
        13 hours ago














      34












      34








      34







      You need to pick a name that you'll use in your professional life. Changing that name has a cost. At this early stage, the cost is low. So, if you want to use your married name professionally, then change to it now. Otherwise, use your maiden name for the duration of your career. (This isn't to say you can't switch later, just that the cost increases over time.)




      would there be any issues with graduating with an old name?




      It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours (given that it won't match your legal name).






      share|improve this answer













      You need to pick a name that you'll use in your professional life. Changing that name has a cost. At this early stage, the cost is low. So, if you want to use your married name professionally, then change to it now. Otherwise, use your maiden name for the duration of your career. (This isn't to say you can't switch later, just that the cost increases over time.)




      would there be any issues with graduating with an old name?




      It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours (given that it won't match your legal name).







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 21 hours ago









      user2768user2768

      14.7k23859




      14.7k23859








      • 3





        It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours - I think this is not at all an issue in Western academia, nor if one goes to industry/government/etc.

        – Kimball
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        @Kimball Regardless, it is a slight burden?

        – user2768
        17 hours ago






      • 2





        @Kathy I suppose that depends how you quantify burden. Changing later might reduce the lifetime burden, because after graduation there is less life. That said, degree certificates probably won't be required later in life, so the period of disruption is perhaps fixed. I'm not sure whether these details are particularly useful. Crucially, changing a name later has a higher impact on professional life, since a name is essentially a brand, which (hopefully) improves over time.

        – user2768
        15 hours ago








      • 3





        @user2768 I'm not in academia, but my employer in Switzerland wanted my O-level certificates from 1974 (as well as my degree certificate). (If you are not familiar with the British education system, O-levels were the muggle equivalent of OWLs.)

        – Martin Bonner
        14 hours ago






      • 5





        @Ali If they regularly ask for it, why aren't they used to people (women especially) changing their names?

        – Azor Ahai
        13 hours ago














      • 3





        It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours - I think this is not at all an issue in Western academia, nor if one goes to industry/government/etc.

        – Kimball
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        @Kimball Regardless, it is a slight burden?

        – user2768
        17 hours ago






      • 2





        @Kathy I suppose that depends how you quantify burden. Changing later might reduce the lifetime burden, because after graduation there is less life. That said, degree certificates probably won't be required later in life, so the period of disruption is perhaps fixed. I'm not sure whether these details are particularly useful. Crucially, changing a name later has a higher impact on professional life, since a name is essentially a brand, which (hopefully) improves over time.

        – user2768
        15 hours ago








      • 3





        @user2768 I'm not in academia, but my employer in Switzerland wanted my O-level certificates from 1974 (as well as my degree certificate). (If you are not familiar with the British education system, O-levels were the muggle equivalent of OWLs.)

        – Martin Bonner
        14 hours ago






      • 5





        @Ali If they regularly ask for it, why aren't they used to people (women especially) changing their names?

        – Azor Ahai
        13 hours ago








      3




      3





      It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours - I think this is not at all an issue in Western academia, nor if one goes to industry/government/etc.

      – Kimball
      17 hours ago





      It may create a slight administrative burden, in that you may have to prove that your degree certificate is yours - I think this is not at all an issue in Western academia, nor if one goes to industry/government/etc.

      – Kimball
      17 hours ago




      7




      7





      @Kimball Regardless, it is a slight burden?

      – user2768
      17 hours ago





      @Kimball Regardless, it is a slight burden?

      – user2768
      17 hours ago




      2




      2





      @Kathy I suppose that depends how you quantify burden. Changing later might reduce the lifetime burden, because after graduation there is less life. That said, degree certificates probably won't be required later in life, so the period of disruption is perhaps fixed. I'm not sure whether these details are particularly useful. Crucially, changing a name later has a higher impact on professional life, since a name is essentially a brand, which (hopefully) improves over time.

      – user2768
      15 hours ago







      @Kathy I suppose that depends how you quantify burden. Changing later might reduce the lifetime burden, because after graduation there is less life. That said, degree certificates probably won't be required later in life, so the period of disruption is perhaps fixed. I'm not sure whether these details are particularly useful. Crucially, changing a name later has a higher impact on professional life, since a name is essentially a brand, which (hopefully) improves over time.

      – user2768
      15 hours ago






      3




      3





      @user2768 I'm not in academia, but my employer in Switzerland wanted my O-level certificates from 1974 (as well as my degree certificate). (If you are not familiar with the British education system, O-levels were the muggle equivalent of OWLs.)

      – Martin Bonner
      14 hours ago





      @user2768 I'm not in academia, but my employer in Switzerland wanted my O-level certificates from 1974 (as well as my degree certificate). (If you are not familiar with the British education system, O-levels were the muggle equivalent of OWLs.)

      – Martin Bonner
      14 hours ago




      5




      5





      @Ali If they regularly ask for it, why aren't they used to people (women especially) changing their names?

      – Azor Ahai
      13 hours ago





      @Ali If they regularly ask for it, why aren't they used to people (women especially) changing their names?

      – Azor Ahai
      13 hours ago











      9














      Your thesis is a publication, and unless you have strong reasons to do so otherwise, I would recommend that you use the same name in all your publications ─ be they theses or papers.



      I would particularly recommend that you do not pay attention to the oft-propagated myth that "nobody reads PhD theses". For one, it's simply not true (at best, it is field-dependent), but more importantly, it is irrelevant. Regardless of whether people read your thesis or not, it will appear in both your CV and other publication lists (Google Scholar, ReseracherId and ORCID, at the very least). I think the core question there is: what name will you use at the head of your CV?




      • If you'll use your maiden name, with only an incidental mention of your legal name when required, then it makes no sense to have any publications under your legal name.

      • If the header will be your legal name, then it still doesn't make sense to have some publications with a different, maiden name (the papers) and some with the legal name. You still have to design around the use of two different names, and using the legal name for the thesis only complicates that design even more.


      I was under a roughly similar situation, where my UK university required a legal name for the PhD thesis that differed from the name I use for papers (specifically, I left out the maternal surname), and I can tell you that the legal name did propagate to places where I would rather have one single unified front.



      More importantly, though, I think that the key distinction is that the PhD diploma and the PhD thesis will be seen by two drastically different audiences.




      • The PhD diploma will probably only be seen by Human Resources staff, or their equivalents, who are trained to deal with this, and for whom person-changed-their-name-through-marriage is a run-of-the-mill type of feature. Having a legal name that differs from that on your PhD diploma, with a marriage certificate to match, won't even raise an eyebrow.


      • The PhD thesis, and particularly its bibliographic details, will be seen by a lot more people, and they will have a lot less incentive to care about the details - it's more likely to confuse them and they're much less likely to chase it up to figure it out.





      After having said all of which, though: It's your name. It's your choice. Consider all the points that everyone has mentioned here, but do what feels right to you.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        This is not just a normal publication. It is a legal document and the name under that document must follow the local laws! It is not something automatic to use any other than the official legal name and I would certainly not do that without consulting the appropriate office of the university. There is nothing definitive strangers on the internet can say for sure.

        – Vladimir F
        9 hours ago













      • @Vladimir OP reports having consulted with their university's registry. Are you suggesting that they shouldn't be believed?

        – E.P.
        7 hours ago











      • @VladimirF This may vary by jurisdiction but in most places a disertation is not a "legal document", at least not in the sense that something like a contract or birth certificate is. And while you should virtually always follow local laws, most places do not have laws regarding the name you publish under.

        – TimothyAWiseman
        6 hours ago













      • @TimothyAWiseman The situation is different in large parts of Europe. When a thesis is a legal requirement for completing a degree, it's not just any publication.

        – Jouni Sirén
        3 hours ago
















      9














      Your thesis is a publication, and unless you have strong reasons to do so otherwise, I would recommend that you use the same name in all your publications ─ be they theses or papers.



      I would particularly recommend that you do not pay attention to the oft-propagated myth that "nobody reads PhD theses". For one, it's simply not true (at best, it is field-dependent), but more importantly, it is irrelevant. Regardless of whether people read your thesis or not, it will appear in both your CV and other publication lists (Google Scholar, ReseracherId and ORCID, at the very least). I think the core question there is: what name will you use at the head of your CV?




      • If you'll use your maiden name, with only an incidental mention of your legal name when required, then it makes no sense to have any publications under your legal name.

      • If the header will be your legal name, then it still doesn't make sense to have some publications with a different, maiden name (the papers) and some with the legal name. You still have to design around the use of two different names, and using the legal name for the thesis only complicates that design even more.


      I was under a roughly similar situation, where my UK university required a legal name for the PhD thesis that differed from the name I use for papers (specifically, I left out the maternal surname), and I can tell you that the legal name did propagate to places where I would rather have one single unified front.



      More importantly, though, I think that the key distinction is that the PhD diploma and the PhD thesis will be seen by two drastically different audiences.




      • The PhD diploma will probably only be seen by Human Resources staff, or their equivalents, who are trained to deal with this, and for whom person-changed-their-name-through-marriage is a run-of-the-mill type of feature. Having a legal name that differs from that on your PhD diploma, with a marriage certificate to match, won't even raise an eyebrow.


      • The PhD thesis, and particularly its bibliographic details, will be seen by a lot more people, and they will have a lot less incentive to care about the details - it's more likely to confuse them and they're much less likely to chase it up to figure it out.





      After having said all of which, though: It's your name. It's your choice. Consider all the points that everyone has mentioned here, but do what feels right to you.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        This is not just a normal publication. It is a legal document and the name under that document must follow the local laws! It is not something automatic to use any other than the official legal name and I would certainly not do that without consulting the appropriate office of the university. There is nothing definitive strangers on the internet can say for sure.

        – Vladimir F
        9 hours ago













      • @Vladimir OP reports having consulted with their university's registry. Are you suggesting that they shouldn't be believed?

        – E.P.
        7 hours ago











      • @VladimirF This may vary by jurisdiction but in most places a disertation is not a "legal document", at least not in the sense that something like a contract or birth certificate is. And while you should virtually always follow local laws, most places do not have laws regarding the name you publish under.

        – TimothyAWiseman
        6 hours ago













      • @TimothyAWiseman The situation is different in large parts of Europe. When a thesis is a legal requirement for completing a degree, it's not just any publication.

        – Jouni Sirén
        3 hours ago














      9












      9








      9







      Your thesis is a publication, and unless you have strong reasons to do so otherwise, I would recommend that you use the same name in all your publications ─ be they theses or papers.



      I would particularly recommend that you do not pay attention to the oft-propagated myth that "nobody reads PhD theses". For one, it's simply not true (at best, it is field-dependent), but more importantly, it is irrelevant. Regardless of whether people read your thesis or not, it will appear in both your CV and other publication lists (Google Scholar, ReseracherId and ORCID, at the very least). I think the core question there is: what name will you use at the head of your CV?




      • If you'll use your maiden name, with only an incidental mention of your legal name when required, then it makes no sense to have any publications under your legal name.

      • If the header will be your legal name, then it still doesn't make sense to have some publications with a different, maiden name (the papers) and some with the legal name. You still have to design around the use of two different names, and using the legal name for the thesis only complicates that design even more.


      I was under a roughly similar situation, where my UK university required a legal name for the PhD thesis that differed from the name I use for papers (specifically, I left out the maternal surname), and I can tell you that the legal name did propagate to places where I would rather have one single unified front.



      More importantly, though, I think that the key distinction is that the PhD diploma and the PhD thesis will be seen by two drastically different audiences.




      • The PhD diploma will probably only be seen by Human Resources staff, or their equivalents, who are trained to deal with this, and for whom person-changed-their-name-through-marriage is a run-of-the-mill type of feature. Having a legal name that differs from that on your PhD diploma, with a marriage certificate to match, won't even raise an eyebrow.


      • The PhD thesis, and particularly its bibliographic details, will be seen by a lot more people, and they will have a lot less incentive to care about the details - it's more likely to confuse them and they're much less likely to chase it up to figure it out.





      After having said all of which, though: It's your name. It's your choice. Consider all the points that everyone has mentioned here, but do what feels right to you.






      share|improve this answer













      Your thesis is a publication, and unless you have strong reasons to do so otherwise, I would recommend that you use the same name in all your publications ─ be they theses or papers.



      I would particularly recommend that you do not pay attention to the oft-propagated myth that "nobody reads PhD theses". For one, it's simply not true (at best, it is field-dependent), but more importantly, it is irrelevant. Regardless of whether people read your thesis or not, it will appear in both your CV and other publication lists (Google Scholar, ReseracherId and ORCID, at the very least). I think the core question there is: what name will you use at the head of your CV?




      • If you'll use your maiden name, with only an incidental mention of your legal name when required, then it makes no sense to have any publications under your legal name.

      • If the header will be your legal name, then it still doesn't make sense to have some publications with a different, maiden name (the papers) and some with the legal name. You still have to design around the use of two different names, and using the legal name for the thesis only complicates that design even more.


      I was under a roughly similar situation, where my UK university required a legal name for the PhD thesis that differed from the name I use for papers (specifically, I left out the maternal surname), and I can tell you that the legal name did propagate to places where I would rather have one single unified front.



      More importantly, though, I think that the key distinction is that the PhD diploma and the PhD thesis will be seen by two drastically different audiences.




      • The PhD diploma will probably only be seen by Human Resources staff, or their equivalents, who are trained to deal with this, and for whom person-changed-their-name-through-marriage is a run-of-the-mill type of feature. Having a legal name that differs from that on your PhD diploma, with a marriage certificate to match, won't even raise an eyebrow.


      • The PhD thesis, and particularly its bibliographic details, will be seen by a lot more people, and they will have a lot less incentive to care about the details - it's more likely to confuse them and they're much less likely to chase it up to figure it out.





      After having said all of which, though: It's your name. It's your choice. Consider all the points that everyone has mentioned here, but do what feels right to you.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 13 hours ago









      E.P.E.P.

      5,0292456




      5,0292456








      • 1





        This is not just a normal publication. It is a legal document and the name under that document must follow the local laws! It is not something automatic to use any other than the official legal name and I would certainly not do that without consulting the appropriate office of the university. There is nothing definitive strangers on the internet can say for sure.

        – Vladimir F
        9 hours ago













      • @Vladimir OP reports having consulted with their university's registry. Are you suggesting that they shouldn't be believed?

        – E.P.
        7 hours ago











      • @VladimirF This may vary by jurisdiction but in most places a disertation is not a "legal document", at least not in the sense that something like a contract or birth certificate is. And while you should virtually always follow local laws, most places do not have laws regarding the name you publish under.

        – TimothyAWiseman
        6 hours ago













      • @TimothyAWiseman The situation is different in large parts of Europe. When a thesis is a legal requirement for completing a degree, it's not just any publication.

        – Jouni Sirén
        3 hours ago














      • 1





        This is not just a normal publication. It is a legal document and the name under that document must follow the local laws! It is not something automatic to use any other than the official legal name and I would certainly not do that without consulting the appropriate office of the university. There is nothing definitive strangers on the internet can say for sure.

        – Vladimir F
        9 hours ago













      • @Vladimir OP reports having consulted with their university's registry. Are you suggesting that they shouldn't be believed?

        – E.P.
        7 hours ago











      • @VladimirF This may vary by jurisdiction but in most places a disertation is not a "legal document", at least not in the sense that something like a contract or birth certificate is. And while you should virtually always follow local laws, most places do not have laws regarding the name you publish under.

        – TimothyAWiseman
        6 hours ago













      • @TimothyAWiseman The situation is different in large parts of Europe. When a thesis is a legal requirement for completing a degree, it's not just any publication.

        – Jouni Sirén
        3 hours ago








      1




      1





      This is not just a normal publication. It is a legal document and the name under that document must follow the local laws! It is not something automatic to use any other than the official legal name and I would certainly not do that without consulting the appropriate office of the university. There is nothing definitive strangers on the internet can say for sure.

      – Vladimir F
      9 hours ago







      This is not just a normal publication. It is a legal document and the name under that document must follow the local laws! It is not something automatic to use any other than the official legal name and I would certainly not do that without consulting the appropriate office of the university. There is nothing definitive strangers on the internet can say for sure.

      – Vladimir F
      9 hours ago















      @Vladimir OP reports having consulted with their university's registry. Are you suggesting that they shouldn't be believed?

      – E.P.
      7 hours ago





      @Vladimir OP reports having consulted with their university's registry. Are you suggesting that they shouldn't be believed?

      – E.P.
      7 hours ago













      @VladimirF This may vary by jurisdiction but in most places a disertation is not a "legal document", at least not in the sense that something like a contract or birth certificate is. And while you should virtually always follow local laws, most places do not have laws regarding the name you publish under.

      – TimothyAWiseman
      6 hours ago







      @VladimirF This may vary by jurisdiction but in most places a disertation is not a "legal document", at least not in the sense that something like a contract or birth certificate is. And while you should virtually always follow local laws, most places do not have laws regarding the name you publish under.

      – TimothyAWiseman
      6 hours ago















      @TimothyAWiseman The situation is different in large parts of Europe. When a thesis is a legal requirement for completing a degree, it's not just any publication.

      – Jouni Sirén
      3 hours ago





      @TimothyAWiseman The situation is different in large parts of Europe. When a thesis is a legal requirement for completing a degree, it's not just any publication.

      – Jouni Sirén
      3 hours ago











      3














      It probably doesn't matter much as few people will look into your thesis at all (at least those people interested in your research). They will rather look at your papers.



      My feeling is that it is better to have all/most of your legal documents under the same name. That is, if you plan to use your new name as your legal name (not for your publications) then it would make sense to have your PhD. diploma also under this name. But I guess most people will manage with diplomas with two names if you explain it to them.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      • Could the downvoter please explain?

        – Guest
        13 hours ago
















      3














      It probably doesn't matter much as few people will look into your thesis at all (at least those people interested in your research). They will rather look at your papers.



      My feeling is that it is better to have all/most of your legal documents under the same name. That is, if you plan to use your new name as your legal name (not for your publications) then it would make sense to have your PhD. diploma also under this name. But I guess most people will manage with diplomas with two names if you explain it to them.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





















      • Could the downvoter please explain?

        – Guest
        13 hours ago














      3












      3








      3







      It probably doesn't matter much as few people will look into your thesis at all (at least those people interested in your research). They will rather look at your papers.



      My feeling is that it is better to have all/most of your legal documents under the same name. That is, if you plan to use your new name as your legal name (not for your publications) then it would make sense to have your PhD. diploma also under this name. But I guess most people will manage with diplomas with two names if you explain it to them.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.










      It probably doesn't matter much as few people will look into your thesis at all (at least those people interested in your research). They will rather look at your papers.



      My feeling is that it is better to have all/most of your legal documents under the same name. That is, if you plan to use your new name as your legal name (not for your publications) then it would make sense to have your PhD. diploma also under this name. But I guess most people will manage with diplomas with two names if you explain it to them.







      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer






      New contributor




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      answered 21 hours ago









      GuestGuest

      472




      472




      New contributor




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      New contributor





      Guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      Guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      • Could the downvoter please explain?

        – Guest
        13 hours ago



















      • Could the downvoter please explain?

        – Guest
        13 hours ago

















      Could the downvoter please explain?

      – Guest
      13 hours ago





      Could the downvoter please explain?

      – Guest
      13 hours ago











      2














      There is one more point for using your maiden name.
      Maiden name is yours forever. Your married name may change.
      If you publish under your married name now, and re-marry later, you will be stuck with your ex's last name.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




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        2














        There is one more point for using your maiden name.
        Maiden name is yours forever. Your married name may change.
        If you publish under your married name now, and re-marry later, you will be stuck with your ex's last name.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Helen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          2












          2








          2







          There is one more point for using your maiden name.
          Maiden name is yours forever. Your married name may change.
          If you publish under your married name now, and re-marry later, you will be stuck with your ex's last name.






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          Helen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.










          There is one more point for using your maiden name.
          Maiden name is yours forever. Your married name may change.
          If you publish under your married name now, and re-marry later, you will be stuck with your ex's last name.







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          Helen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer






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          answered 12 hours ago









          HelenHelen

          311




          311




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          New contributor





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              1














              The legal position in the UK is quite different to that in many other jurisdictions. In English common law your name is that by which you are generally known. It follows that, if you wish, you can change your name as often as you change your hat. Now, you might be asked to provide evidence that your name is what you say it is: as the UK government website puts it:" You do not have to follow a legal process to start using a new name. But you might need a ‘deed poll’ to apply for or to change official documents like your passport or driving licence."



              So, from a legal point of view in the UK there is no such thing as your "legal" name. In the academic world just use the name by which you wish to be known in that world. It might be very convenient to continue to use the name that is used on your various degree certificates, but if you don't want to do that just drop a line to the awarding institution to say that your name has changed.






              share|improve this answer




























                1














                The legal position in the UK is quite different to that in many other jurisdictions. In English common law your name is that by which you are generally known. It follows that, if you wish, you can change your name as often as you change your hat. Now, you might be asked to provide evidence that your name is what you say it is: as the UK government website puts it:" You do not have to follow a legal process to start using a new name. But you might need a ‘deed poll’ to apply for or to change official documents like your passport or driving licence."



                So, from a legal point of view in the UK there is no such thing as your "legal" name. In the academic world just use the name by which you wish to be known in that world. It might be very convenient to continue to use the name that is used on your various degree certificates, but if you don't want to do that just drop a line to the awarding institution to say that your name has changed.






                share|improve this answer


























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  The legal position in the UK is quite different to that in many other jurisdictions. In English common law your name is that by which you are generally known. It follows that, if you wish, you can change your name as often as you change your hat. Now, you might be asked to provide evidence that your name is what you say it is: as the UK government website puts it:" You do not have to follow a legal process to start using a new name. But you might need a ‘deed poll’ to apply for or to change official documents like your passport or driving licence."



                  So, from a legal point of view in the UK there is no such thing as your "legal" name. In the academic world just use the name by which you wish to be known in that world. It might be very convenient to continue to use the name that is used on your various degree certificates, but if you don't want to do that just drop a line to the awarding institution to say that your name has changed.






                  share|improve this answer













                  The legal position in the UK is quite different to that in many other jurisdictions. In English common law your name is that by which you are generally known. It follows that, if you wish, you can change your name as often as you change your hat. Now, you might be asked to provide evidence that your name is what you say it is: as the UK government website puts it:" You do not have to follow a legal process to start using a new name. But you might need a ‘deed poll’ to apply for or to change official documents like your passport or driving licence."



                  So, from a legal point of view in the UK there is no such thing as your "legal" name. In the academic world just use the name by which you wish to be known in that world. It might be very convenient to continue to use the name that is used on your various degree certificates, but if you don't want to do that just drop a line to the awarding institution to say that your name has changed.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 7 hours ago









                  JeremyCJeremyC

                  1,397311




                  1,397311























                      0














                      For your thesis it will not really matter at all as the thesis itself will not be read by many people (sad truth!) (and if you have to proof somewhere that you are the person who holds this degree you can always provide the marriage certificate in addition).



                      It is however very important that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on many numerical descriptors (e.g. H-index) and this will be very difficult if you publish under 2 different names. If this is your maiden name or your current one is up to you.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                      • 3





                        Let me add that there is something more important than "that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on" namely that you should publish under a name you can identify with. Your wellbeing is far more important than your career!!! For what it's worth, I recently changed my name and do not want to be refereed under my previous name, no matter how good this would be for my "career".

                        – Guest
                        16 hours ago






                      • 1





                        @Guest +1 for "Your wellbeing is far more important than your career"

                        – JeffE
                        15 hours ago











                      • Yes, right the "well-being" overrules possibly everything said before ;-)

                        – lordy
                        15 hours ago
















                      0














                      For your thesis it will not really matter at all as the thesis itself will not be read by many people (sad truth!) (and if you have to proof somewhere that you are the person who holds this degree you can always provide the marriage certificate in addition).



                      It is however very important that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on many numerical descriptors (e.g. H-index) and this will be very difficult if you publish under 2 different names. If this is your maiden name or your current one is up to you.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.
















                      • 3





                        Let me add that there is something more important than "that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on" namely that you should publish under a name you can identify with. Your wellbeing is far more important than your career!!! For what it's worth, I recently changed my name and do not want to be refereed under my previous name, no matter how good this would be for my "career".

                        – Guest
                        16 hours ago






                      • 1





                        @Guest +1 for "Your wellbeing is far more important than your career"

                        – JeffE
                        15 hours ago











                      • Yes, right the "well-being" overrules possibly everything said before ;-)

                        – lordy
                        15 hours ago














                      0












                      0








                      0







                      For your thesis it will not really matter at all as the thesis itself will not be read by many people (sad truth!) (and if you have to proof somewhere that you are the person who holds this degree you can always provide the marriage certificate in addition).



                      It is however very important that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on many numerical descriptors (e.g. H-index) and this will be very difficult if you publish under 2 different names. If this is your maiden name or your current one is up to you.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.










                      For your thesis it will not really matter at all as the thesis itself will not be read by many people (sad truth!) (and if you have to proof somewhere that you are the person who holds this degree you can always provide the marriage certificate in addition).



                      It is however very important that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on many numerical descriptors (e.g. H-index) and this will be very difficult if you publish under 2 different names. If this is your maiden name or your current one is up to you.







                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer






                      New contributor




                      lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                      answered 17 hours ago









                      lordylordy

                      651




                      651




                      New contributor




                      lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.





                      New contributor





                      lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.






                      lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.








                      • 3





                        Let me add that there is something more important than "that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on" namely that you should publish under a name you can identify with. Your wellbeing is far more important than your career!!! For what it's worth, I recently changed my name and do not want to be refereed under my previous name, no matter how good this would be for my "career".

                        – Guest
                        16 hours ago






                      • 1





                        @Guest +1 for "Your wellbeing is far more important than your career"

                        – JeffE
                        15 hours ago











                      • Yes, right the "well-being" overrules possibly everything said before ;-)

                        – lordy
                        15 hours ago














                      • 3





                        Let me add that there is something more important than "that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on" namely that you should publish under a name you can identify with. Your wellbeing is far more important than your career!!! For what it's worth, I recently changed my name and do not want to be refereed under my previous name, no matter how good this would be for my "career".

                        – Guest
                        16 hours ago






                      • 1





                        @Guest +1 for "Your wellbeing is far more important than your career"

                        – JeffE
                        15 hours ago











                      • Yes, right the "well-being" overrules possibly everything said before ;-)

                        – lordy
                        15 hours ago








                      3




                      3





                      Let me add that there is something more important than "that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on" namely that you should publish under a name you can identify with. Your wellbeing is far more important than your career!!! For what it's worth, I recently changed my name and do not want to be refereed under my previous name, no matter how good this would be for my "career".

                      – Guest
                      16 hours ago





                      Let me add that there is something more important than "that you choose one name for all of you publications that arise from your thesis and further career as a later scientific life will build on" namely that you should publish under a name you can identify with. Your wellbeing is far more important than your career!!! For what it's worth, I recently changed my name and do not want to be refereed under my previous name, no matter how good this would be for my "career".

                      – Guest
                      16 hours ago




                      1




                      1





                      @Guest +1 for "Your wellbeing is far more important than your career"

                      – JeffE
                      15 hours ago





                      @Guest +1 for "Your wellbeing is far more important than your career"

                      – JeffE
                      15 hours ago













                      Yes, right the "well-being" overrules possibly everything said before ;-)

                      – lordy
                      15 hours ago





                      Yes, right the "well-being" overrules possibly everything said before ;-)

                      – lordy
                      15 hours ago





                      protected by StrongBad 11 hours ago



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