March 11, 2008

Plagiarism Accusation About Turkish Physicists

Turkiye Klinikleri J Med Ethics
Year: 2008 Volume: 16 Issue:1 

LETTER TO THE EDITOR
In an article published in Nature dated Sept 6, 2007, it was stated that nearly 70 articles of 15 scientists from 18 Mart, Dicle and Mersin universities have been removed from a popular preprint server by allegation of plagiarism.[1]
Some points in the article such as value-laden statements, generalizations, and that not taking into consideration of a system which urges academicians publishing with an orientalistic point of view in another language that they have not been educated appropriately, generated the thought of writing to the editor of Nature. I would like to share this letter, which was rejected by Nature, with our academic community, and sending your journal by hoping it to be ac cepted for publishing.

"Sir
Certain issues raised by Mr. Brumfiel’s article (“Turkish physicists face accusations of plagiarism” Nature 449, 8, 2007) must be addressed. It mustn’t be over looked that as yet there isn’t enough information to assess the situation thoroughly, and this essentially precludes the ability to make an ethical analysis of the situation. Although they contain some fallacies such as ad populum and non sequitor, some of the arguments made in their own defense by the accused academicians deserve to be considered seriously. For instance, they have publicly declared that some of the articles they have been accused of plagiarising were published after their work. Therefore language such as “allegedly” or “seem to be involved” is correct, not politically but factually. However, the sentence, “There are some cultures in which plagiarism is not even regarded as deplorable” is a counter-example. I’m not aware of any sociological research concerning this premise, perhaps it’s true; nevertheless, its inclusion makes the language value-laden. Since culture includes moral values which have been shaped and changed by various factors, it’s a mistake to discuss the moral atmosphere surrounding a certain scientific community without considering the factors which have shaped it, such as English barriers, as Mr. Smith mentioned (“Need to speak English puts burden on Asian scientists” Nature 445, 256, 2007), and local factors, such as those in Mr. Sarioglu’s formula: “They’re isolated, their English is bad, and they need to publish”. What Mr. Sarioglu didn’t include is ‘their work should interest Western editors’. If scientific work is assessed regarding editors’ interests per se, not the needs of a particular society, then publishing transforms to some kind of a price to pay, and end transforms to means.”

[1]. Brumfiel, G. Turkish physicists face accusations of plagiarism. Nature, 2007. 449(7158):8.

No comments:

Random Posts


  • Letter to Editors

    From: "ODTU Rektor" To: jhep-eo@jhep.sissa.itSubject: Ethics CommitteeDate: Wed, 21 Mar 2007 10:22:46 +0200 Dear Editors,We are writing this message concerning a serious plagiarism case that we have come across with in a paper published by JHEP. First of all, we would like to express our disappointm... READ MORE>>

  • Experimenting with plagiarism detection on the arXiv:PHYSICS TODAY

    Toni Feder Starting this summer, submissions to the arXiv, the online server where many physicists check daily for new preprints, will be compared with the server's existing 400 000—and counting—manuscripts to check for plagiarism. When plagiarism is suspected, the submission will be flagged, and ... READ MORE>>

  • Plagiarism Detection in arXiv (2007)

    Sorokina Daria, Gehrke Johannes, Warner Simeon, Ginsparg Paul Abstract We describe a large-scale application of methods for finding plagiarism in research document collections. The methods are applied to a collection of 284,834 documents collected by arXiv.org over a 14 year period, covering a few... READ MORE>>

  • Will anything really change? Views from a journal editor

    Michael 2007;4:53–56The title of this conference is «Research misconduct: learning the lessons». However, the organizers seem to be somewhat confused, because the title of this last session today is: «Will anything really change?» If you really have learnt your lessons, then things will change. Howe... READ MORE>>

  • Plagiarists face clampdown : TIMES HIGHER EDUCATION

    Phil Baty More cases of academic fraud come to light as institutions embrace zero-tolerance culture, reports Phil Baty.>>> READ MORE>>

  • Trolling the arXiv for plagiarism

    John Timmer In a subscription-only report on an upcoming conference presentation, Nature spills the beans on what may be our best handle yet on plagiarism in the world of academic science. Most research into this area has been limited by the inaccessibility of many of the peer-reviewed journals, wh... READ MORE>>

  • Corruption and Fraud in Science

    Water, Air & Soil Pollution (2006) DOI 10.1007/s11270-006-9209-8 J. T. Trevors & M. H. Saier, Jr. Science is conducted by people, not all of whom are honest and credible, and some of whom unfortunately do not place the interests of humanity and our common biosphere ahead of their own self... READ MORE>>

.

.
.

Popular Posts