Difference between revisions of "Resource:E3a1be4e-2ff9-4b7f-b44c-abd409fe225a"

From The Embassy of Good Science
 
Line 2: Line 2:
 
|Resource Type=Cases
 
|Resource Type=Cases
 
|Title='I am really sorry': Peer Reviewer Stole Text for Own Paper
 
|Title='I am really sorry': Peer Reviewer Stole Text for Own Paper
|Is About=This factual case describes an instance of plagiarism by a peer reviewer. The peer reviewer had sent the unpublished manuscript to a colleague with whom he was writing a review. Portions of text from the paper that needed to be peer-reviewed ended up in the published version of the review. The review was retracted, and the peer reviewer apologized.
+
|Is About=This factual case describes an instance of plagiarism by a peer reviewer. The peer reviewer had sent the unpublished manuscript to a colleague with whom he was writing a review. Portions of text from the manuscript under review ended up in the published review written by the peer reviewer and his colleague. The review was retracted, and the peer reviewer apologized.
|Important Because=Peer reviewing is essential to maintain the integrity of academic literature. Importantly, authors that submit a manuscript for peer-reviewing should be able to trust that their manuscripts are not used for any other end than the peer review itself unless they have given explicit permission for it.
+
|Important Because=Peer reviewing is essential to maintaining the integrity of academic literature. Importantly, authors who submit a manuscript for peer review should be able to trust that their manuscripts will not be used for any purpose other than the peer review itself, unless they have given explicit permission for this.
 
|Important For=Researchers; Peer reviewers; Reviewers
 
|Important For=Researchers; Peer reviewers; Reviewers
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 14:48, 19 August 2021

Cases

'I am really sorry': Peer Reviewer Stole Text for Own Paper

What is this about?

This factual case describes an instance of plagiarism by a peer reviewer. The peer reviewer had sent the unpublished manuscript to a colleague with whom he was writing a review. Portions of text from the manuscript under review ended up in the published review written by the peer reviewer and his colleague. The review was retracted, and the peer reviewer apologized.

Why is this important?

Peer reviewing is essential to maintaining the integrity of academic literature. Importantly, authors who submit a manuscript for peer review should be able to trust that their manuscripts will not be used for any purpose other than the peer review itself, unless they have given explicit permission for this.

For whom is this important?

Other information

Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
5.1.6