Sci Eng Ethics. 2013 Aug 30. [Epub ahead of print]
Detecting and (Not) Dealing with Plagiarism in an Engineering Paper: Beyond CrossCheck-A Case Study.
Source
Journal of Zhejiang University-SCIENCE (A/B/C), 38 Zheda Road, Hangzhou, 310027, China.Abstract
In
papers in areas such as engineering and the physical sciences, figures,
tables and formulae are the basic elements to communicate the authors'
core ideas, workings and results. As a computational text-matching tool,
CrossCheck cannot work on these non-textual elements to detect
plagiarism. Consequently, when comparing engineering or physical
sciences papers, CrossCheck may return a low similarity index even when
plagiarism has in fact taken place. A case of demonstrated plagiarism
involving engineering papers with a low similarity index is discussed,
and editor's experiences and suggestions are given on how to tackle this
problem. The case shows a lack of understanding of plagiarism by some
authors or editors, and illustrates the difficulty of getting some
editors and publishers to take appropriate action. Consequently,
authors, journal editors, and reviewers, as well as research
institutions all are duty-bound not only to recognize the differences
between ethical and unethical behavior in order to protect a healthy
research environment, and also to maintain consistent ethical publishing
standards.
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