Re: [Gen NB] Concerns about plagiarism

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Sarbajit Roy

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Nov 9, 2013, 5:39:10 AM11/9/13
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Dear Dr. Dwivedi,

Yes it is a very informative piece, which all Institutes in India which claim to be doing research should follow.

Your reply encourages me to take the liberty of addressing a few lines to you as a device to communicate to other young researchers who run the real risk of being sucked into the dark world of unethical, paid, fabricated research (actually uncredited/ mentioned-in-passing work done by research associates and the like), whose recommendations are slanted by "seniors" to favour the agenda of whoever is sponsoring them (mainly large corporate houses directly or indirectly through government grants with unspoken strings attached).

Such paid research is, to my mind, an even bigger danger for the nation than plagiarism  - since it comes with the imprimatur of a prestigious institute and is taken by gospel by the uninitiated. I have also frequently found both vile acts of "paid research" and "plagiarism" to be twins co-joined at the hip.

Once a researcher crosses the line of truth there is no turning back for him, a well documented example being Prof R.A. Mashelkar (a one time head of CSIR) now busy patenting in his Govt sponsored foundation's name the innovations of powerless little people with inventive minds.

There is also no doubt that for people crossing over to the dark side to sell out the nation with fabricated research there is no shortage of money, power, awards or every other aphrodisiac available to satisfy all your desires.

Please don't fall prey to these blandishments and be true to your chosen noble profession. Pure research should be uncontaminated by commercial considerations.

With best wishes

Sarbajit Roy
India Against Corruption

On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 11:46 AM, punit.hyd <puni...@gmail.com> wrote:
great info..
thanks


On Saturday, October 19, 2013 1:33:46 AM UTC+5:30, iimahd.ernet wrote:
Adapted from
J Med Phys. 2007 Oct-Dec; 32(4): 143–144.
doi:  10.4103/0971-6203.37477
PMCID: PMC3014097
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3014097/

A concern about plagiarism
William R. Hendee
Author information ► Copyright and License information ▼
Copyright © Journal of Medical Physics
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

An allegation of plagiarism is a serious accusation and should never be taken lightly. On the other hand, self-policing is a major strength of the scientific community, and plagiarism should always be reported when it is suspected to have occurred


Plagiarism (from the Latin "plagiare", meaning "to kidnap") is defined as "the appropriation or imitation of the language, ideas and thoughts of another author and representation of them as one's original work" (The Random House Dictionary of the English Language - unabridged).

Plagiarism is a serious breach of research ethics that, if committed intentionally, is considered research misconduct. Plagiarism may result in serious sanctions, including public disclosure, loss of research funding, loss of professional stature and termination of employment.

Plagiarism undermines the authenticity of research manuscripts and the journals in which they are published and compromises the integrity of the scientific process and the public regard for science. Plagiarism violates the literary rights of individuals who are plagiarized and the property rights of copyright holders. Violation of literary or property rights' may result in legal action against the individual(s) committing plagiarism.

Although plagiarism has existed since the beginning of science, it seems to be increasing because the World Wide Web (Internet) facilitates finding and copying the work of others.

...

When there is a possibility of plagiarism (often through an allegation of plagiarism by the original author, a reviewer or an interested third party), the journal's editor should act quickly. The editor should examine the original material and the publication alleged to constitute plagiarism. If the editor concludes that no plagiarism has occurred, the accuser should be notified, and no further action is necessary. If the evidence suggests that plagiarism may have occurred, the editor should contact the accused author(s), the author(s) whose work may have been plagiarized and the copyright holder of the original material if different from the author(s). The correspondence should include the alleged plagiarizing language and a copy of the original and suspected work. If all parties agree that plagiarism (whether intentional or unintentional) has occurred, a written letter of apology should be sent promptly by the offending author(s) to the editor and to the author(s) and copyright holder whose work has been plagiarized. If the offending work has been published, a notice of plagiarism, citing both the plagiarized and the offending articles and containing the exact text that has been plagiarized, should be published in the next available article of the journal in which the offending article was published. The plagiarizing authors must agree that all dissemination of the offending article will to be accompanied by the notice of plagiarism

If the accused author(s) deny that plagiarism has occurred, the editor must explore the accusation further, preferably through a mechanism already established by the journal to investigate allegations of scientific misconduct. All parties to the allegation should be encouraged to submit corroborating evidence, and the accused author(s) should be granted an opportunity (at no expense to the journal) to testify in person in defense against the allegation. The investigation should be concluded within a reasonable period of time (e.g. 3 months)

If the mechanism to investigate the allegation of plagiarism concludes in support of the allegation, then the process for the case in which plagiarism is admitted should be instituted. Further, the editor must decide whether the plagiarism should be reported to the guilty parties' supervisor, employer and/or professional organization. If the mechanism rules against the accusation of plagiarism, a letter stating this ruling should be provided to the accuser, the author(s) accused of plagiarism, the author(s) of the original work and the copyright holder if different from the author(s). In either case, these actions should constitute closure of the allegation of plagiarism.

An allegation of plagiarism is a serious accusation and should never be taken lightly. On the other hand, self-policing is a major strength of the scientific community, and plagiarism should always be reported when it is suspected to have occurred

circulated in the public interest by "Ethical Researchers Network (India)"



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Posted By IIMA to Gen NB on 10/18/2013 01:03:00 pm
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