Title: Plagiarism in the sciences: What do we really know
1Plagiarism in the sciences What do we really
know?
This is a slightly abridged version of Miguel
Roigs slides for his METM06 plenary address.
This version is posted with the speakers
permission as background information for the MET
workshop Managing plagiarism an approach to
dialog between authors and editors.
- Miguel Roig, Ph.D.
- Associate Professor
- Department of Psychologyroigm_at_stjohns.edu
Portions of this presentation have been shown
elsewhere.
2Some Dictionary Definitions¹
- The action of using or copying someone elses
idea or work and pretending that you thought of
it or created it (Collins). - To take words, ideas, etc., from someone elses
work and use them in ones own work without
admitting one has done so(Longman). - To steal and pass off as ones own the ideas or
words of another (Webster). - ¹taken from Decoo, W. (2002). Crisis on campus
Confronting academic misconduct. - The MIT Press Cambridge, MA
3Universal Scholarly Conventions
- Verbatim text taken from another source must be
enclosed in quotation marks and its source/author
must be clearly identified. - When paraphrasing others text, such text must
be substantially modified and its source/author
must be clearly indicated.
4Plagiarism as scientific misconduct
5Scientific Misconduct
FabricationData/Results FalsificationData/Res
ults Plagiarism 42 Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) Part 93effective on June 16,
2005
6US Public Health Services definition
Plagiarism is the appropriation of another
persons ideas, processes, results, or words
without giving appropriate credit. Research
misconduct does not include honest error or
differences of opinion (Section 93.103).
7US Office of Research Integrity
(ORI)http//ori.dhhs.gov/policies/plagiarism.shtm
l
- As a general working definition, ORI considers
plagiarism to include both the theft or
misappropriation of intellectual property and the
substantial unattributed textual copying of
another's work. It does not include authorship or
credit disputes.The theft or misappropriation
of intellectual property includes the
unauthorized use of ideas or unique methods
obtained by a privileged communication, such as a
grant or manuscript review.
8National Science Foundation (NSF)
- (a) Research misconduct means fabrication,
falsification, or plagiarism in proposing or
performing research funded by NSF, reviewing
research proposals submitted to NSF, or in
reporting research results funded by NSF. - Research, for purposes of paragraph (a) of this
section, includes proposals submitted to NSF in
all fields of science, engineering, mathematics,
and education and results from such proposals. - http//a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010
800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/ - cfr_2002/octqtr/45cfr689.1.htm
9Cases of plagiarism investigated by the US
government
- From 1992-2005 ORI reported a total of 159 cases
of scientific misconduct, 19 (12) of which
involved plagiarism. - In a similar time period, the NSF reported that
66 of their cases of scientific misconduct
involved a finding of plagiarism. - (the discrepancy between ORI and NSF cases
involves differences in how each defines
plagiarism, namely, the fact that NSF does
consider certain cases of authorship disputes as
plagiarism)
10What is the incidence of plagiarism?
11Incidence of plagiarism
- Falsification and fabrication appear to be more
frequent than plagiarism (Miller, 2005).Recent
Plagiarism estimates range from .2 (Claxton,
Mutation Research, 200558917-30) to about 14
for self-plagiarism in one specific area of
biomedicine (Schein, New Surgery, 20041,
139-140.
12Gibelman, Gelman (2003)
Plagiarism by Faculty/Scholars in the News
2000-2003 University Individual Field______
Trinity International University (CA) Dean
Winston F. Frost Law Monash University
(Australia) Vice Chancellor Sociology Dav
id Robinson Kumaun University (India) Balwant
Singh Rajput Physics University of Albany
(NY) Louis Roberts Humanities Wesley College
(DE) President Scott D. Miller Unknown TV
Commentator Scholar Lecturer Doris Kearns
Goodwin History University of New Orleans (LA)
Stephen Ambrose History Gibelman, M.
Gelman, S. R. (2003). Plagiarism in Academia
Trends and Implications. Accountability in
Research Policies Quality Assurance, 10,
229-252.
13Gibelman, Gelman (2003)
Plagiarism by Faculty/Scholars in the News
2000-2003 University Individual Field___ Moun
t Holyoke (MA) Joseph J. Ellis
History Hamilton College (NY) President
Eugene Tobin Unknown Cornell University (NY)
David A. Levitsky Nutrition Heald College
(Various locations) Senior Vice President,
Unknown Roger C. Anderson Liverpool
Hospital, University Bruce Hall Immunol. of
New South Wales (Australia) Peking University
(China) Wang Mingming Anthrop. Gibelman, M.
Gelman, S. R. (2003). Plagiarism in Academia
Trends and Implications. Accountability in
Research Policies Quality Assurance, 10,
229-252.
14Gibelman, Gelman (2003)
Plagiarism by Faculty/Scholars in the News
2000-2003 University Individual
Field___ Boston University (MA) John J. Schulz
Commun. University of Pirarus (Greece)
Prof. Assima Kopoulos Engin. University of
Texas Health Center Momiao Xiong Health
Sc. U.S. Naval Academy (MD) Brian VanDeMark
History Florida Atlantic University Lindsey
S. Hamlin Intern. William
T. Ryan Business __________________________
__________________________________________ Gibelma
n, M. Gelman, S. R. (2003). Plagiarism in
Academia Trends and Implications.
Accountability in Research Policies Quality
Assurance, 10, 229-252.
15Martinson, et al.s (2005) study
- A recent study by Martinson, et al., indicates
that of 3,247 US scientists - 1.4 use anothers ideas without obtaining
permission or giving due credit. - 4.7 publish the same data or results in two or
more publications. - 33 admit to some other form of ethically
questionable misbehavior. - Martinson, B. C., Anderson, M. S., de Vries, R.
(2005). Scientists behaving badly. Nature, 435,
737-738.
16NSFs Internal Study (2006)
- A total of 600 grant proposals submitted to NSF
were analyzed using Bloomfields software.
Approximately 2.5 of the sample was found to
contain unattributed copying from other sources. - No differences between disciplines (e.g.,
physics, chemistry) were detected. - Proposals from certain areas (NSF career
enhancement) yielded significantly higher rates
(15) than other areas.http//www.nsf.gov/pubs/2
006/oigmarch2006/oigmarch2006_4.pdf -
17Cases of plagiarism in China
- From 1999 to 2005, there were 542 cases
investigated by the NSF of China. There were 60
cases found to be misconduct. - 34 of cases involved plagiarism.
- Yidong, G. (2005). China Science Foundation
Takes Action Against 60 Grantees. Science, 309,
1798-1799.
18Plagiarism is probably more common than the data
seem to indicate
- There is every reason to believe that the
existing literature significantly underestimates
the extent of the problem. - Why?
19Limitations of Survey research
20Much of the evidence for plagiarism is from
survey research
- Items tend to reflect the unique way in which
concepts and categories are presented by the
researchers - Social desirability of items or of
respondents/biased samples - Reliance on memory of events/behaviors
- Respondents views on what constitutes plagiarism
tend to be liberal
21Some cases are kept hidden
22There is some reluctance to out plagiarists
- A plagiarism case may be perceived as reflecting
poorly on the journal (killing the messenger)
and some editors might be reluctant to take
proper action. - Inaction on the part of institutions or
associations (see recent case by Chalmers in
BMJ). - Fear of litigation
- Plagiarism cases are often kept confidential (NSF
does not name names ORI does). - Fear of retaliatory legal action by the accused.
23 A significant number of professionals plagiarize
in subtle ways and these cases are sometimes
difficult to recognize
24Plagiarism Is More Common Than the Research
Indicates
- There are those who believe that as long as a
citation is included, they can simply appropriate
portions of text from another source and use that
text as their own writing. - Julliard (1994) found that physicians, but not
most medical students or English faculty hold the
above view. - Julliard, K. (1993). Perceptions of plagiarism
in the use of other author's language. Family - Medicine, 26, 356-360.
25Plagiarism Is More Common Than the Research
Indicates
- Others believe that, as long as you can change a
word here or there in a sentence, the resulting
writing constitutes an acceptable paraphrase and
not plagiarism.
26Plagiarism and paraphrasing criteria of college
professors Roig M. Plagiarism and paraphrasing
criteria of college and university
professors. Ethics Behavior 200111(3)307-323.
27Study Instructions
- Assume that you want to include the information
from the Zenhausern paragraph in your paper and
are considering the re-written versions shown
below. Please examine each re-written paragraph
carefully, compare it with the original version
above, and ... indicate whether ... the
re-written version constitutes a case of
plagiarism (P), not plagiarism, that is, the
paragraph has been legitimately paraphrased (NP),
or you simply cannot determine (CD).
28College professors (first row n 138) and
psychology professors (second row n 53)
responses
- __________________________________________________
_________________ - Plagiarized Not
Plagiarized Cannot Determine - __________________________________________________
_________________ - Paragr 1 92 (126) 7 (10) 1 (2)
- 96 (51) 3 (2) 0 (0)
- Paragr 2 83 (114) 12 (17) 5
(7) - 92 (49) 6 (3) 2 (1)
- Paragr 3 81 (111) 13 (18) 6
(9) - 81 (43) 9 (5) 9 (5)
- __________________________________________________
______From Roig, M. (2001). Plagiarism and
paraphrasing criteria of college and university
professors Ethics and Behavior (11) 3, 307-323.
29College professors (first row n 138) and
psychology professors (second row n 53)
responses
- __________________________________________________
_________________ - Plagiarized Not
Plagiarized Cannot Determine - __________________________________________________
_________________ - Paragr 4 48 (66) 44 (60) 9 (12)
- 57 (30) 36 (19) 8 (4)
- Paragr 5 4 (5) 94 (129) 3
(4) - 6 (3) 93 (49) 2 (1)
- Paragr 6 4 (5) 91 (126) 5
(7) 2 (1) 93 (49) 6 (3) - __________________________________________________
______From Roig, M. (2001). Plagiarism and
paraphrasing criteria of college and university
professors Ethics and Behavior (11) 3, 307-323.
30Appropriate and inappropriate paraphrasing
- Paragraph 4
- According to one researcher, subjective and
objective tests of imagery ability have not
resulted in differences in performance and
therefore the only way to determine if a person
thinks visually or nonvisually is to ask that
question directly. One important finding is that
many nonvisual thinkers who state with confidence
that they do not think in pictures have rather
vivid imagery.
- ORIGINAL
- Since subjective and objective tests of imagery
ability have not resulted in predicted
performance differences, the only way to
determine if a person thinks visually or
nonvisually is to ask that question directly. ...
One important finding is that many nonvisual
thinkers have rather vivid imagery, but they can
state with confidence that they do not think in
pictures" (Zenhausern, 1978, p. 382).
31Appropriate and inappropriate paraphrasing
-
- Paragraph 6
- Zenhausern (1978) reports that various types
of instruments designed to measure imagery have
yielded inconsistent results. He suggests that
the only technique that will tell us whether
someone thinks visually or not is to ask the
person directly. However, this author also notes
that some individuals who admit that they do not
think in pictures report having very vivid
imagery (p. 382).
- ORIGINAL
- Since subjective and objective tests of imagery
ability have not resulted in predicted
performance differences, the only way to
determine if a person thinks visually or
nonvisually is to ask that question directly. ...
One important finding is that many nonvisual
thinkers have rather vivid imagery, but they can
state with confidence that they do not think in
pictures" (Zenhausern, 1978, p. 382).
32College professors (first row n 138) and
psychology professors (second row n 53)
responses
- __________________________________________________
_________________ - Plagiarized Not
Plagiarized Cannot Determine - __________________________________________________
_________________ - Paragr 4 48 (66) 44 (60) 9 (12)
- 57 (30) 36 (19) 8 (4)
- Paragr 5 4 (5) 94 (129) 3
(4) - 6 (3) 93 (49) 2 (1)
- Paragr 6 4 (5) 91 (126) 5
(7) 2 (1) 93 (49) 6 (3) - __________________________________________________
______From Roig, M. (2001). Plagiarism and
paraphrasing criteria of college and university
professors Ethics and Behavior (11) 3, 307-323.
33What happens when college professors are asked to
paraphrase these paragraphs?
34Study Instructions
- Let's assume that you want to include the
information from the original paragraph in your
paper but that you do not want to use a direct
quote. Instead, you want to paraphrase the
entire paragraph. How would you re-write the
above version of the paragraph so as to not be
classified as a case of plagiarism? In the space
below, please paraphrase the above paragraph to
the best of your ability (use the back of the
page if you need more space). Assume that a
correct citation (e.g., a footnote, Zenhausern,
1978) will appear in your paper's reference
section. Also, please write clearly and legibly.
35How would you paraphrase the following paragraph?
- ORIGINAL
- Since subjective and objective tests of imagery
ability have not resulted in predicted
performance differences, the only way to
determine if a person thinks visually or
nonvisually is to ask that question directly. ...
One important finding is that many nonvisual
thinkers have rather vivid imagery, but they can
state with confidence that they do not think in
pictures" (Zenhausern, 1978, p. 382). -
36How would you paraphrase the following paragraph?
- ORIGINAL
- If you have ever had your astrological chart
done, you may have been impressed with its
seeming accuracy. Careful reading shows many
such charts to be made up of mostly flattering
traits. Naturally, when your personality is
described in desirable terms, it is hard to deny
that the description has the ring of truth"
(Coon, 1995, p. 29).
37Text misappropriation by professors as function
of paragraph readability
-
- College Professors
Psychologists - Difficult-to-read Difficult-
to-read Easy-to-read - (n 109)
(n 43) (n 64)
__________________________________________________
__________________ - String Length
- 5-word strings 30 26
03 6-word strings
22 19 037-word
strings 18 16
008-word strings 09
09 00 - _________________________________________________
____________ - From Roig, M. (2001). Plagiarism and
paraphrasing criteria of college and university
professors Ethics and Behavior (11) 3, 307-323.
38Text misappropriation as function of paragraph
readability
-
- College Professors Psychologists
Students
Difficult-to-read Easy-to-read
Difficult-to-read Easy-to-read - (n 109)
(n 64) (n 215)
(n 206) __________________________________
_________________________________________ - String Length
- 5-word strings 30 03
68 19 6-word strings
22 03 62
16 7-word strings 18 00
53 10 8-word
strings 09 00 41
09 - _________________________________________________
__________________Student data from Roig, M.
(1999). When college students' attempts at
paraphrasing become instances of - potential plagiarism. Psychological Reports,
84, 973-982.
39 Plagiarism has not been fully operationalized
and the available guidance is sometimes
inconsistent.
40Paraphrasing according to the general writing
guides
41General Writing Guides
- When paraphrasing, you restate an authors ideas
in your own words. A good paraphrase retains the
organization, emphasis, and often many of the
details of the original passage - Kennedy, X. J., Kennedy, D. M., Holladay, S. A.
(2002). The Bedford Guide for College Writers,
6th ed. Boston Bedford/St. Martins Press.
42General Writing Guides
- Changing a word here and there and reversing the
order of phrases is not sufficient, even though
you give credit in a footnote (Campbell
Ballou, 1990, p. 11). - In explaining proper paraphrasing strategies
these authors further warn - Do not substitute synonyms here and there or
rearrange sentence elements (Campbell Ballou,
p. 39). - Campbell, W. G., Ballou, S. V. (1990). Form
and Style Theses, Reports, Term Papers. (5th
ed.). Boston Houghton Mifflin.
43General Writing Guides
- You also plagiarize when you use words so close
to those in your source, that if your work were
placed next to the source, it would be obvious
that you could not have written what you did
without the source at your elbow. (Booth,
Colomb, Williams, 1995 p. 167) - Booth, W. C., Colomb, G. G., Williams, J. M.
(1995). The craft of research. Chicago - The University of Chicago Press.
44Biology Writing Guide
Writing Guides in Biology
- Express your own thoughts in your own words.
Note, too, that simply changing a few words here
and there, or changing the order of a few words
in a sentence or paragraph, is still plagiarism.
Plagiarism is one of the most serious crimes in
academia. (Pechenik, 2001 p.10). - Pechnick, J. A. (2001). A short guide to
writing about biology, 4th Edition. New York
Addison Wesley Longman.
45Plagiarism and paraphrasing according to the
professional writing guides
- Most of the student and professional writing
guides provide coverage for plagiarism. However,
few of the professional guides cover the more
subtle forms of plagiarism (e.g., inappropriate
paraphrasing).
46The American Medical Association Manual of Style,
9th edition
- Direct Plagiarism Verbatim lifting of passages
without enclosing the borrowed material in
quotation marks and crediting the original
author. - Mosaic Borrowing ideas and opinions from an
original source and a few verbatim words or
phrases without crediting the original author. In
this case the plagiarist intertwines his or her
own ideas and opinions with those of the original
author, creating a confused plagiarized mass
47The American Medical Association Manual of Style,
9th edition
- Paraphrase Restating a phrase or passage,
providing the same meaning but in a different
form without attribution to the original author. - Insufficient acknowledgement Noting the original
source of only part of what is borrowed or
failing to cite the source material in such a way
that a reader will know what is original and what
is borrowed.
48The APA Manual
- One guide that provides some coverage of proper
paraphrasing is the Publication Manual of the
American Psychological Association (2001). - Unfortunately the coverage provided by the APA
Manual is misleading
49The APA Manual
- From the APA Manual
- Each time you paraphrase another author (i.e.,
summarize a passage or rearrange the order of a
sentence and change some of the words), you will
need to credit the source in the text. - Please note that summarizing and paraphrasing are
two distinct processes, though in both instances
we must acknowledge the source of the material.
50US Office of Research Integrity
(ORI)http//ori.dhhs.gov/policies/plagiarism.shtm
l
- Substantial unattributed textual copying of
another's work means the unattributed verbatim or
nearly verbatim copying of sentences and
paragraphs which materially mislead the ordinary
reader regarding the contributions of the author.
ORI generally does not pursue the limited use of
identical or nearly-identical phrases which
describe a commonly-used methodology or previous
research because ORI does not consider such use
as substantially misleading to the reader or of
great significance.
51Institutional standards are more conservative
- S. Baughman (2005) has noted that some
universities steer their faculty to abide by
standards set up for students. However, these can
be in conflict with professional standards. - According to Price (2005) Two cases referred to
ORI in which the institutions had found
plagiarism were dismissed by ORI as not
constituting misconduct.
52- Perhaps ORIs definition may stem from
encountering situations, such as the one that
follows
53Try paraphrasing this paragraph
- Mammalian histone lysine methyltransferase,
suppressor of variegation 39H1 (SUV39H1),
initiates silencing with selective methylation on
Lys9 of histone H3, thus creating a high-affinity
binding site for HP1. When an antibody to
endogenous SUV39H1 was used for
immunoprecipitation, MeCP2 was effectively
coimmunoprecipitated conversely, aHA antibodies
to HA-tagged MeCP2 could immunoprecipitate
SUV39H1 (Fig. 2G). (Lunyak, et al., 2002 p.
1748) - Lunyak, V., et al., (2002). Corepressor-dependen
t silencing of chromosomal regions encoding
neuronal genes. Science, 298, 1747-1756.
54Even the most terse text can be paraphrased
- ORIGINAL VERSION
- Mammalian histone lysine methyltransferase,
suppressor of variegation 39H1 (SUV39H1),
initiates silencing with selective methylation on
Lys9 of histone H3, thus creating a high-affinity
binding site for HP1. When an antibody to
endogenous SUV39H1 was used for
immunoprecipitation, MeCP2 was effectively
coimmunoprecipitated conversely, aHA antibodies
to HA-tagged MeCP2 could immunoprecipitate
SUV39H1 (Fig. 2G). (Lunyak, et al., 2002, p.
1748) -
- PARAPHRASED VERSION
- According to Lunyak, et al. (2002), a high
affinity binding site for HP1 can be produced by
silencing Lys9 of histone H3 by methylation with
mammalian histone lysing methyltransferase, a
suppressor of variegation 39H1 (SUV39H1). MeCP2
can be immunoprecipitated with antibodies
prepared against endogenous SUV39H1 on the other
hand, immunoprecipitation of SUB39H1 resulted
from aHA antibodies to HA-tagged MeCP2.
55But, it is not easy!!
- There are some instances in which the extent to
which text can be modified is very limited ... - Particularly in situations where the author has
less than a full command of the language, proper
paraphrasing can be extremely difficult.
56Self-Plagiarism Can one steal from one self?
57Plagiarism vs. self-plagiarism
- Plagiarism refers to the misappropriation of
others ideas, words, images, design properties,
data, musical notes, etc. - Self-plagiarism refers to authors re-use of
their earlier work and passing it of as new or
original material .
58Forms of Professional Self-plagiarism
- Duplicate publication/presentation Submitting a
paper to a journal or conference which had been
previously written for journal or conference
under a slightly different title. - Redundant publication occurs when some portion of
previously published data is used again in a new
publication with no indication that the data had
been published earlier.
59Forms of Professional Self-plagiarism
- Fragmented or piecemeal publication occurs
when a complex study is broken down into two or
more components and each component is analyzed
and published as a separate paper. - Augmented publication occurs when when a
simpler study is made more complex by the
addition of more observations or experimental
conditions.
60Forms of Professional Self-plagiarism
- Salami Slicing Using data from a large, complex
study and segmenting it to produce two or more
papers. - Text recycling Reusing portions of previously
published text in a new publication without
reference to the original. - The essence of self-plagiarism in all of the
above instances is that the reader is not made
aware of the duplication.
61The evidence for self-plagiarism
62Empirical evidence for self-plagiarism
- Schein (2001) found that 14 of 660 articles
represented a clear form of redundant
publication. - Schein, M. (2001) Redundant publicationsfrom
self-plagiarism to Salami-Slicing.
NewSurgery, 1, 139-140.
63Empirical evidence for self-plagiarism
- More recently, von Elm, et al. (2004), reported
that of 1,234 articles reviewed in the area of
anesthesia and analgesia, 5 were duplicates that
gave no indication as to the original
publication. -
- von Elm, E., Poglia, G., Walder, B. Tramèr,
M. R. (2004). Different patterns - of duplicate publication. Journal of
the American Medical Association. 291, - 974980.
64Many do not believe self-plagiarism is unethical
- In a study of health educators, Price, et al.
(2001) reported that 64 of their sample stated
that self-plagiarism is an acceptable behavior - Price, J. H., Dake, J. A., Islam, R. (2001).
Selected ethical issues in research and
publication Perceptions of health education
faculty. Health Education and Behavior, 28, 51-64.
65Why self-plagiarism is problematic
- It misleads the reader into thinking that the
material is new. - More importantly, self-plagiarism overestimates
or underestimates a statistical effect thereby
biasing our state of knowledge in a given area.
66What about reusing portions of previously
published text?
67Traditional scholarly conventions
- Verbatim text taken from another source must be
enclosed in quotation marks and its source must
be clearly identified. - When paraphrasing others text, such text must be
substantially modified and its source must be
clearly indicated. - Technically, the same rules apply when verbatim
or paraphrased text was re-used by the same
author in a new publication or conference
presentation.
68Text reuse in a sample of 9 psychology journal
articles
- Study Method
- Obtained electronic versions of all articles
(target articles) published in one issue of a
psychology journal. - For each target article I obtained at least 3 of
the articles from the same author/authors that
were cited as references (source). - I compared each of the references to the target
article to determine if any text had been re-used
from any of the earlier published sources.
69Text reuse in a sample of 9 psychology journal
articles
-
- __________________________________________________
_ - Target Article Id A B C D E
F G H I - __________________________________________________
_ - String length Number of word-strings
detected - _________________________________
- 6 9 8 1 0 6 1 2
8 2 - 7 6 1 0 0 0 1 3
6 1 - 8 6 1 0 0 3 1 1
3 1 - 9 4 1 1 0 0 0 0
0 0 - 10 and longer 13 0 0
0 0 1 2 3 0 - __________________________________________________
___ - 30 sentences of a total of 79 contained text
strings derived from other same-authored
publications. - From Roig (2005). Re-using text from ones own
previously published papers - An exploratory study of potential
self-plagiarism. Psychological Reports, - 97, 43-49.
70Results
- Most of the reused text found was derived from
methodology sections. - Other comparisons between pairs of references
revealed at least 4 instances of identical sets
of 40 to 60 word strings, again, mainly in
Methods sections.
71Is it self-plagiarism? Is it unethical?
- Given standard scholarly conventions (i.e.,
quotations, footnotes) are there any
circumstances where even small amounts of text
(e.g., one full sentence) can be re-used without
any indication of its origin? - Text from these sections is sometimes difficult
to paraphrase. For example - Mammalian histone lysine methyltransferase,
suppressor of variegation 39H1 (SUV39H1),
initiates silencing with - selective methylation on Lys9 of histone H3
72It is best to avoid re-using ones own text
- On the other hand, at least one journal cautions
against the use of previously published methods
sections as templates for writing these sections
in new publications (Academic Emergency
Medicine) - http//www.saem.org/inform/aempub.htm
73Guidelines from selected journals
- At the time of submission, authors must describe
in a cover letter any data, figures, or text in
the manuscript that have been used in other
papers (Conservation Biology) http//www.conbio.o
rg/SCB/Publications/ConsBio/Instructions/ - A paper submitted to the Indian Pediatrics
should not overlap by more than 10 with
previously published work, or work submitted
elsewhere which then would be labeled as
duplicate publication. http//www.indianpediatric
s.net/author1.htm
74Guidelines from selected journals
- The authors must describe in a cover letter any
data, illustrations, or text in the manuscript
that have been used in other papers that are
published, in press, submitted, or soon to be
submitted elsewhere (Evolution and Development),
http//www.blackwellpublishing.com/submit.asp?ref
1520-541X - If part of a contribution has appeared or will
appear elsewhere, the author must specify the
details in the covering letter accompanying the
Nature submission (Nature). http//www.nature.com
/nature/authors/policy/index.html
75OTHER SITUATIONS WHERE TEXT RE-USE OCCURS
- What are the parameters of text reuse? What are
readers expectations?
76From article to grant proposal?
- From article to grant proposal? Vice versa?
- From journal article to conference presentation?
Vice versa? - From one book to another?
- Where is the guidance with respect to these
questions? Who decides whether these activities
are appropriate or not?
77Am I self-plagiarizing this talk?
- It depends on whether you assume that this
presentation was exclusively prepared for you.
Therefore, please note that - Many of the ideas and slides from this
presentation have been shown at other venues
(e.g., conferences)
78Plagiarism in the sciences What do we really
know?
79What do we really know?
- We know that it happens, but we do not know its
true incidence. - There are significant discrepancies amongst the
various official definitions of plagiarism. - There is no operational definition of plagiarism
(extent or form of misappropriation). - Few guidelines exist on text self-plagiarism.
80Thank youMiguel Roig
- roigm_at_stjohns.edu
- http//facpub.stjohns.edu/roigm/plagiarism