Title of article :
Editorial Accidental similarity
Author/Authors :
Bruijnsa, Stevan R Division of Emergency Medicine - University of cape Town - Cape Town, South Africa , Beyeneb , Temesgen Department of Emergency Medicine - Addis Ababa University School of Medicine - Addis Ababa, Ethiopia , Azazhc , Aklilu Department of Emergency Medicine - Addis Ababa University School of Medicine - Addis Ababa, Ethiopia , Tupesisd , Janis P University of Wisconsin - School of Medicine and Public Health - Berbee Walsh Department of Emergency Medicine - Graduate Medical Education Liaison, USA
Abstract :
The University of Oxford defines plagiarism as: “presenting someone
else's work or ideas as your own, with or without their consent, by in-
corporating it into your work without full acknowledgement.”[1] There
are various types of plagiarism, ranging from subtle (e.g. presenting
others’ideas) to the not-so-subtle (e.g. presenting others’work), but in
essence it means passing offsomeone else’s work or ideas as your own.
Most authors will agree that this is wrong, however, understanding the
exact nature of plagiarism can often be tricky in environments where
core research method knowledge lacks. With the internet of today
providing so many more sources to cite from compared to years gone by,
keeping track of similarity without a good similarity checker is often
impossible.
The vast majority of plagiarism cases I have had to deal with tend to
be due to ignorance, rather than purpose (as a result I prefer the term
similarity where copying was unintentional and plagiarism where there
was clear signs of intent). Pre-publication, this requires a simple noti-
fication of the similarity score to the authors so that they can make
amendments and correct identified sections of similarity. Within our
journal flow, similarity is only checked once on initial submission. I
suspect many other journals will reject a paper with high similarity,
however, we have found that in most cases authors simply weren’t
aware that what they did could be considered plagiarism. Resultantly,
we take a more supportive approach and rarely reject a paper based on
an initially high similarity score
Keywords :
Editorial , Accidental similarity , COPE
Journal title :
African Journal of Emergency Medicine