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ADDRESSING
ETHICAL STANDARDS
Addressing
Ethical Standards: Anti-Plagiarism Software
In 2002, the ASPB
Executive Committee instructed the Publications Committee to begin to
develop a comprehensive set of guidelines to address ethics in publishing.
This exercise had two goals. One goal was to develop procedures for the
handling of allegations of ethical violations in the Societys publications.
The second and more important goal was to educate the Societys membership
as well as authors, editors, reviewers, and staff associated with the
Societys journals. The ethical issues associated with scientific
publication are many and often subtle, and we were motivated in the spirit
of an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
Of all the ethical
issues we have considered to date, plagiarism is arguably the most complicated.
Our ASPB policies define plagiarism as taking material from anothers
work and submitting it as ones own. We last addressed plagiarism
in this column one year ago (ASPB News, November/December 2004, pages
1011). Our article emphasized that ASPB holds authorsnot the
Society or its editors and reviewersresponsible for ensuring that
all the ideas and findings included in a manuscript are attributed to
the proper source. We also referred to our role as steward of what constitutes
ethical conduct and, conversely, ethical misconduct and our commitment
to continue to strive to educate all the parties in the publishing process.
Education is paramount, because if there is one thing we have learned
after dealing with several cases of alleged plagiarism over the past year,
it is that plagiarism can be a bit of a gray area, not just for authors
but for editors and publishers as well.
Help may be on the
way, in the form of plagiarism-detection tools adapted for the scholarly
peer review process. The May 19, 2005, issue of Nature noted in
an article titled Taking on the Cheats that academic publishers
hold hope that the software already used by universities to catch cheating
students can soon be adapted to catch instances of plagiarism, intentional
or otherwise. Critically, no totally reliable plagiarism-detection tool
exists, even today. Bob Campbell, president of Blackwell Publishing, suggested
in Nature (p. 259) that the overall solution probably will come
when publishers collaborate on industry-wide detection systems.
The May 19, 2005, edition of the Chronicle of Higher Education
covered the same topicusing software to uncover plagiarism and self-plagiarism.
Even if there were
reliable and sensitive plagiarism-detection software, many issues would
remain to be addressed. For example, how much copying is legitimate? Clearly,
the reuse of large amounts of others text constitutes plagiarism.
But what should one think about copying short passages from the authors
own earlier work, such as commonly occurs in the Methods section? After
all, how many ways are there to describe the growth conditions used for
ones seedlings or the procedure to detect a protein by immunohistochemistry?
In the Nature article it is suggested that some journals set a
quantitative limit whereby the amount of text that can be reused is limited
to about 30 percent. This may be utilitarian, but it seems curious and
arbitrary that 25 percent of copied text might be deemed acceptable whereas
30 percent might not. Indeed, two authors who copied the same number of
words could find themselves on opposite sides of that border if one author
simply was more verbose and thus diluted their plagiarized content below
the threshold! No, this is not a simple issue at all.
A second issue is
the role of ASPB as gatekeeper or policeman: Should the Society or its
journals routinely screen all submissions for plagiarism? An alternative
approach might be to provide access for all authors to such software at
the ASPB journal sites (in the Instructions for Authors sections) to facilitate
authors screening their own work. This honor system would
be in keeping with a role as stewards and educators. The journals would
then address allegations of plagiarism that emerged during the review
process or after publication, much as is the case at present. Again, these
are challenging issues that we would like the Societys membership
to consider.
So, in our ongoing
spirit of education, we wish to draw our members attention to this
issue of plagiarism. Our intent is not to define what is and what is not
acceptable, but to encourage the consideration and discussion of this
issue among our members and their colleagues. It would make an excellent
topic for your next group meeting! To inform these discussions, the first
few paragraphs of the Nature article are reprinted below, by permission,
with a link to the full article appended.
References
Carlson, S. (2005, May 19). Journal publishers turn to software
to root out scholarly plagiarism. Chronicle of Higher Education;
http://chronicle.com/daily/2005/05/2005051901t.htm.
Giles, J. (2005, May 19). Taking on the cheats. Nature 435:258259.
C.
Robertson McClung
Chair, Publications Committee
c.robertson.mcclung@dartmouth.edu
Nancy
Winchester
Director of Publications
nancyw@aspb.org
The
following extract is reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers
Ltd: Nature, Volume 435, May 19, 258259, copyright 2005.
SPECIAL REPORT
Taking on the Cheats
The true extent of plagiarism is unknown, but rising cases of suspect
submissions are forcing editors to take action.
Jim Giles reports
The fight against
plagiarism is about to take a decisive turn. Academic publishers have
told Nature they hope that software designed to catch cheating
students could soon be used to unmask academics who plagiarize other researchersor
their ownwork.
Big publishers such
as Elsevier and Blackwell, which between them publish more than 2,500
journals, have been prompted to act by reports that plagiarism is becoming
more common. Were hearing about it more frequently from editors,
says Bob Campbell, president of Blackwell Publishing in Oxford, UK.
Self-plagiarism, in
which authors attempt to pass off already published material as new, is
a particular problem. In an increasingly competitive environment where
appointments, promotions and grant applications are strongly influenced
by publication record, researchers are under intense pressure to publish,
and a growing minority are seeking to bump up their CVs through dishonest
means.
The extent of the
problem is hard to assess. Defining plagiarism is not straightforward
and
measuring the incidence of even the most clear-cut cases is difficult.
Studies in certain fields have estimated that anything up to 20% of published
papers contain some degree of self-plagiarism.
This may not be representative
of basic research, but no rigorous, multidisciplinary study has ever been
conducted.
And although most
cases are never discovered, almost all of the editors and publishers contacted
by Nature agreed that self-plagiarism is on the rise. Editors
are noticing many more cases, says Scott Dineen, director of editorial
services at the Optical Society of America, which publishes ten journals.
Last month, the increase prompted the society to issue an editorial statement
on its commitment to expose plagiarism.
The advent of antiplagiarism
software, such as that used by universities to check student essays, means
that editors and publishers finally have a practical way to tackle the
problem. Online services check essays against massive stores of documents
generated from web trawls and purchases from media outlets. Supervisors
can see which parts of the essays seem to be plagiarized and where the
copied material comes from.
Subscribers can
view the article in its entirety at http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v435/n7040/index.html.
Nonsubscribers will not have access to the article.
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