July 3, 2008

Allow me to rephrase, and boost my tally of articles: THE

Scholars are passing off old work as new to drive up publications counts.
Pressure to publish is pushing many academics to plagiarise large volumes of their own work by "dressing up" their old research to appear as if it were new, a study has found.
Researchers using text-matching software have highlighted the phenomenon of "self-plagiarism", in which academics recycle sections of their previously published work without proper citations.
Scholars who engage in the practice, which undermines academia's pursuit of original knowledge, can gain an unfair career advantage over their more honest colleagues, the researchers say.
A pilot study by Tracey Bretag and Saadia Carapiet from the University of South Australia found that 60 per cent of authors in a random sample of 269 papers from the Web of Science social science and humanities database had self-plagiarised at least once in the period 2003-06. Self-plagiarism was defined "quite generously" as occurring when 10 per cent or more text from any single previous publication was reused without a citation.
"The truth is that if these authors had self-cited in each case, it is unlikely that the editors would have published their work because they would have seen that it had all been published before," Dr Bretag said.
Dr Bretag, who presented a paper on her research last week at the Joint Information Systems Committee's Third International Plagiarism Conference at Northumbria University, believes academics need clearer rules. "I think we ask more of our students than we do of ourselves," she said.
"This issue underpins everything we do as academics. Are academics here to churn out paper after paper saying the same thing over and over again? Academic work is supposed to be original knowledge creation. But as long as you reward this behaviour, it is very hard to change it."
Her findings were likely to represent only the tip of the iceberg, she said, because the study ignored dual or duplicate publication, in which identical articles are printed in different journals. A number of recent studies in medicine and health sciences have found dual-publication rates of about 3 per cent.
John Barrie, chief executive of iParadigms and the man who developed the technology behind Turnitin, the plagiarism-detection software, described self-plagiarism as a "huge" problem.
"Academics receive tenure based on their publications - it is publish or perish. That system creates this massive conflict of interest," he said.
"Anybody who has done any research knows it is very difficult to do. You just can't crank out five, ten papers a year unless (...) you have a research team of 20 people."
This month sees the launch of CrossCheck, an anti-plagiarism system for academic journals created by iParadigms to help publishers verify the originality of submitted work. It will cover 20 million journal articles from major publishers including Elsevier, Nature Publishing Group, Oxford University Press and Sage.
Liz Smith, the head of journal development at Elsevier, said: "Self-plagiarism does happen - it actually happens frequently, I think. We see redundant publication, when the same data are given a different slant, and we've had to withdraw papers that have turned out to be duplicates or near duplicates."
CrossCheck will help editors to spot many types of ethical infringement, she said. "It doesn't matter whether you are duplicating someone else's text or your own, if it is in the CrossCheck database, or on the web, it will be picked up."
rebecca.attwood@tsleducation.com.

No comments:

Random Posts


  • Combating plagiarism

    EditorialNature Photonics 3, 237 (2009)doi:10.1038/nphoton.2009.48Accountability of coauthors for scientific misconduct, guest authorship and deliberate or negligent citation plagiarism, highlight the need for accurate author contribution statements.>>> READ MORE>>

  • Responding to Possible Plagiarism

    SCIENCE, 6 March 2009: Vol. 323. no. 5919, pp. 1293 - 1294 DOI: 10.1126/science.1167408Tara C. Long,1 Mounir Errami,2 Angela C. George,1 Zhaohui Sun,2 Harold R. Garner1,2*The peer-review process is the best mechanism to ensure the high quality of scientific publications. However, recent studies have... READ MORE>>

  • Study finds plenty of apparent plagiarism (Science News)

    Data mining reveals too many similarities between papers By Janet Raloff Web edition : Thursday, March 5th, 2009 Enlarge IS THIS PLAGIARISM? Yellow highlights aspects of this paper that copy material published in a previous paper — by other authors. UT Southwestern Medical CenterIf copyi... READ MORE>>

  • Borrowing words, or claiming them?

    EditorialNature Immunology 10, 225 (2009)doi:10.1038/ni0309-225Journals are taking steps to stem of the practice of plagiarism.Have you ever experienced a sense of déjà vu after reading a colleague's manuscript or researching a topic of interest? A paragraph or entire section sounds eerily familiar—... READ MORE>>

  • It's Culture, Not Morality - INSIDE HIGHER ED

    Scott JaschikWhat if everything you learned about fighting plagiarism was doomed to failure? Computer software, threats on the syllabus, pledges of zero tolerance, honor codes -- what if all the popular strategies don't much matter? And what if all of that anger you feel -- as you catch students cle... READ MORE>>

  • Problems with anti-plagiarism database

    Mauno VihinenNATURE|Vol 457|1 January 2009 SIR — Sophisticated tools have been developed to detect duplicate publication and plagiarism, as noted in M. Errani and H. Garner’s Commentary ‘A tale of two citations’ (Nature 451, 397–399; 2008) and in your News story ‘Entire-paper plagiarism caught by so... READ MORE>>

  • Entire-paper plagiarism caught by software - NATURE

    Thousands of 'similarities' found between papers. Declan Butler Nature 455, 715 (2008) >>>> Many of the duplicates in Deja Vu come from non-English-speaking countries, and some scientists have asserted that a degree of plagiarism is justified as a way of improving the English of their te... READ MORE>>

.

.
.

Popular Posts