Difference between revisions of "Resource:7afd29a3-0098-43db-b80f-bdc79282a1c9"
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
|Is About=This presents seven anonymized case of allegations of plagiary and from these draws specific conclusions and advice to authors and administrators. | |Is About=This presents seven anonymized case of allegations of plagiary and from these draws specific conclusions and advice to authors and administrators. | ||
|Important Because=Examples are useful for recognizing, highlight, and avoiding plagiary. | |Important Because=Examples are useful for recognizing, highlight, and avoiding plagiary. | ||
− | |Important For=Researchers; Administrators; Doctoral students; Early career researchers; Editors | + | |Important For=Researchers; Administrators; Doctoral students; Early career researchers; Editors; Research Integrity Officers |
|Has Best Practice=Specific advice for authors: "Do not put your name on a manuscript written by someone else. • Do not insert someone else’s text as a place-holder in a draft manuscript. The original might not be replaced later. • Do not copy verbatim the background section of someone else’s paper. Copying an amount beyond fair use might violate copyright law. The background section could be incomplete or erroneous. A subsequent inquiry or investigation would consume a lot of time from faculty and administrators, and it could embarrass the institution. • Include references to all sources, with appropriate citations, in all manuscripts and grant proposals. • Take allegations of plagiarism to a research integrity officer. If there is no research integrity officer, then consult a knowledgeable administrator"<ref>Loui, Michael C. "Seven ways to plagiarize: Handling real allegations of research misconduct." ''Science and Engineering Ethics'' 8.4 (2002): 529-539.</ref> | |Has Best Practice=Specific advice for authors: "Do not put your name on a manuscript written by someone else. • Do not insert someone else’s text as a place-holder in a draft manuscript. The original might not be replaced later. • Do not copy verbatim the background section of someone else’s paper. Copying an amount beyond fair use might violate copyright law. The background section could be incomplete or erroneous. A subsequent inquiry or investigation would consume a lot of time from faculty and administrators, and it could embarrass the institution. • Include references to all sources, with appropriate citations, in all manuscripts and grant proposals. • Take allegations of plagiarism to a research integrity officer. If there is no research integrity officer, then consult a knowledgeable administrator"<ref>Loui, Michael C. "Seven ways to plagiarize: Handling real allegations of research misconduct." ''Science and Engineering Ethics'' 8.4 (2002): 529-539.</ref> | ||
+ | <references /> | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Link | {{Link |
Revision as of 17:12, 26 October 2020
Seven Ways to Plagiarize: Handling Real Allegations of Research Misconduct; Case #6: The Magazine Surprise
What is this about?
Why is this important?
For whom is this important?
What are the best practices?
Specific advice for authors: "Do not put your name on a manuscript written by someone else. • Do not insert someone else’s text as a place-holder in a draft manuscript. The original might not be replaced later. • Do not copy verbatim the background section of someone else’s paper. Copying an amount beyond fair use might violate copyright law. The background section could be incomplete or erroneous. A subsequent inquiry or investigation would consume a lot of time from faculty and administrators, and it could embarrass the institution. • Include references to all sources, with appropriate citations, in all manuscripts and grant proposals. • Take allegations of plagiarism to a research integrity officer. If there is no research integrity officer, then consult a knowledgeable administrator"[1]
- ↑ Loui, Michael C. "Seven ways to plagiarize: Handling real allegations of research misconduct." Science and Engineering Ethics 8.4 (2002): 529-539.