September 14, 2012

Mathgen paper accepted!

Nate Eldredge
I’m pleased to announce that Mathgen has had its first randomly-generated paper accepted by a reputable journal!

On August 3, 2012, a certain Professor Marcie Rathke of the University of Southern North Dakota at Hoople submitted a very interesting article to Advances in Pure Mathematics, one of the many fine journals put out by Scientific Research Publishing. (Your inbox and/or spam trap very likely contains useful information about their publications at this very moment!) This mathematical tour de force was entitled “Independent, Negative, Canonically Turing Arrows of Equations and Problems in Applied Formal PDE”, and I quote here its intriguing abstract:
Let ρ=A. Is it possible to extend isomorphisms? We show that D is stochastically orthogonal and trivially affine. In [10], the main result was the construction of p-Cardano, compactly Erdős, Weyl functions. This could shed important light on a conjecture of Conway-d’Alembert.
The full text was kindly provided by the author and is available as PDF.
After a remarkable turnaround time of only 10 days, on August 13, 2012, the editors were pleased to inform Professor Rathke that her submission had been accepted for publication. I reproduce here (with Professor Rathke’s kind permission) the notification, which includes the anonymous referee’s report. >>>

Random Posts


  • Plagiarism at arXiv, and Nature journals' policies

    Maxine Clarke This week's Nature (449, 8; 2007) features a News story about a plaigiarism scandal involving more than a dozen theoretical physicists at four universities in Turkey. Almost 70 papers by 15 authors have been removed from the popular preprint server arXiv, where many physicists post th... READ MORE>>

  • Turkish physicists face accusations of plagiarism : News : NATURE

    Geoff Brumfiel AbstractScores of papers are removed from arXiv server. More than a dozen theoretical physicists at four universities in Turkey seem to be involved in a massive plagiarism scandal. Almost 70 papers by 15 authors have been removed from the popular preprint server arXiv, where many p... READ MORE>>

  • Cases of Plagiarism in Turkey

    Dear Colleagues: You may be already aware of a massive case of plagiarism uncovered recently in Turkey. You can find the details by linking to http://arxiv.org/new/removals07aug.html This news will no doubt be as disconcerting to you as it is to me. Plagiarism is not the bane of any one country ... READ MORE>>

  • Talk:2007 Plagiarism Ring Affair

    Blake StaceyJust one tiny quibble: "damage control" could suggest that METU is seeking to cover things up or spin them, which seems not to be the case at all, in fact my impression is that METU is handling this much more responsibly than most universities would do. Can I "be bold" in Wikipedia sense... READ MORE>>

  • 2007 Plagiarism Ring Affair - EUREKA

    In August of 2007, the technology-oriented website Ars Technica [1] revealed that the arXiv was withdrawing a set of seventeen physics papers due to plagiarism. These papers had been written by a group of graduate students at the Middle East Technical University (METU) in Ankara, Turkey. After detec... READ MORE>>

  • Massive Plagiarism Scandal - August 23rd, 2007

    Peter Woit From Ars Mathematica I learned about an article at Ars Technica describing a scandal involving plagiarism of theoretical physics papers by about 20 different people, some of them students at the Middle East Technical University in Ankara. Many of the papers were refereed and published i... READ MORE>>

  • Plagiarism at arXiv - Ars Mathematica

    A reader tipped me off to this article in Ars Technica about an egregious case of plagiarism uncovered at arXiv. At least two people, grad students at Middle East Technical University (METU), created papers in physics by splicing together existing papers. The plagiarism was uncovered by the faculty ... READ MORE>>

.

.
.

Popular Posts