Irulandy Ponniah
As a freelance reviewer for few journals based in India, I am often engrossed with the review of manuscripts being sent to me, especially, in the recent past. Understandably, the culture of increased manuscript submission was the consequence of governing body regulations in India, which had suddenly awakened to instill a sense of continuing education in the minds of the teaching faculty.
As a freelance reviewer for few journals based in India, I am often engrossed with the review of manuscripts being sent to me, especially, in the recent past. Understandably, the culture of increased manuscript submission was the consequence of governing body regulations in India, which had suddenly awakened to instill a sense of continuing education in the minds of the teaching faculty.
As most were trained as good practitioners’  than reasonable science writers, it is not unusual for prospective  authors’ to             rely on previously published materials to gain an overview  before they start to write. And inevitably, they may also subconsciously             reproduce few exact sentences from other print materials  amounting to plagiarism. But what actually constitutes text plagiarism?             According to Pecorari [1], copying word for word from source text rather than spontaneous composition is considered text plagiarism. He also believes             that in-text citation of the sourced material is more important than “simply listing a work in the reference list” [1]. The quoted phrase is repeated from the cited authors’ own words, which does not constitute plagiarism, but a whole article             cannot be legitimately written with just quotation marks.          
The perception of text plagiarism might vary  among authors and academic experts in India. What with authors (when  confronted)             claiming as coincidental or believe on the lines that  “borrowing sentences in the part of a paper does not amount to  plagiarism,             especially, when the results are original” [2].          
Although, it is widely believed that editors are indifferent towards charges of plagiarism [3],  I present few instances of suspected plagiarism and the response of the  concerned journal editors in India. In case one,             the reader found that there was substantial textual copying  (with or without attribution) in an article published in a journal,             and in case two and three, textual copying was detected at  the stage of peer review. In the latter instance, on appraisal,             the editors of the concerned journals promptly rejected the  manuscripts. On the other hand, in case one, there was denial             of textual plagiarism by one of the experts while the other  deemed it as ‘unintentional’. A similar allegation with an international             journal, which after expert evaluation, swiftly acted on the  charge of plagiarism. Incidentally, the author was also the journal             editor where there was denial of outright plagiarism by one  of the reviewers. Arguably, the reviewer is likely to be correct             in his view as his opinion might have been based on the  assumption that “today’s patch-writer is tomorrow’s competent academic             writer, given the necessary support to develop” [1].          
The US office for research integrity (see http://ori.dhhs.gov/policies/plagiarism.shtml)  defines text plagiarism as substantial unattributed textual copying of  others. However, it excludes limited usage of pertinent             sentences. But this should not be construed to mean that  limited copy-typed texts from wider sources not amount to plagiarism.          
The electronic resource made it possible both in terms of copying and detection of such tactics [4]. This is evident from the reasons assigned for retracted papers (see http://blogs.wiley.com/publishingnews/2010/06/30/retractions-in-wiley-blackwell-journals/).  In just 7 months (September 2009 to March 2010) 17 cases were retracted  for text duplication (29%) and serious error plus             text duplication in another 6% of retractions. A search  (Pubmed) with keywords like “retraction and India” would show that             63% of retractions involved a particular authors’. This  indicates that plagiarism or academic fraud is committed more often             by repeat offenders.          
A number of journal editor’s uses software (see http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100705/full/466167a.html)  to screen manuscripts for the degree of text similarity at the time of  submission. This would definitely save time and energy             not only for the journals, but also for the reviewers. The  move by a medical university, in India, to check plagiarism in             the submitted dissertation or PhD thesis is a step in the  right direction to discourage textual plagiarism (http://www.tnmmu.ac.in/plagiarism.htm). But, however, screening with software may also produce too many results for a document when there is slight overlap with             other sources (see http://arxiv.org/abs/cs/0702012). For example, copy the first paragraph above and paste in the “input your text” column in eTBLAST (see http://etest.vbi.vt.edu/etblast3/) for similarity based text-matching to find the number of matching results which would take considerable time by manual checks             to establish whether plagiarism or not [5].          
Although, a number of software is in use and  increasingly, journals have become alert to detect plagiarism, it is in  the hands             of science writers and researchers to attenuate plagiarism  (in any form) before readers stop trusting scientific messages.          
Conflict of interest                                        
The author declares no conflict of interest.
References
1. Pecorari D (2003) Good and original: plagiarism and patchwriting in academic second-language writing. J Sec Lang Writ 12:317–345
2. Yilmaz I (2007) Plagiarism? No, we’re borrowing better English. Nature 449:658
3. Wager E, Fiack S, Graf C, Robinson A, Rowlands I (2009) Science journal editors’ views on publication ethics: results of an international survey. J Med Ethics 35:348–353
4. Stafford N (2010) Science in the digital age. Nature 467:S19–S21
5. Errami M, Garner H (2008) A tale of two citations. Nature 451:397–399
Journal of Maxillofacial and Oral Surgery
DOI: 10.1007/s12663-011-0193-1
References
1. Pecorari D (2003) Good and original: plagiarism and patchwriting in academic second-language writing. J Sec Lang Writ 12:317–345
2. Yilmaz I (2007) Plagiarism? No, we’re borrowing better English. Nature 449:658
3. Wager E, Fiack S, Graf C, Robinson A, Rowlands I (2009) Science journal editors’ views on publication ethics: results of an international survey. J Med Ethics 35:348–353
4. Stafford N (2010) Science in the digital age. Nature 467:S19–S21
5. Errami M, Garner H (2008) A tale of two citations. Nature 451:397–399
Journal of Maxillofacial and Oral Surgery
DOI: 10.1007/s12663-011-0193-1