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Academic Integrity in Scientific Publishing Mariann Burright Scholarly Communication Librarian Northwestern University Library.

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Presentation on theme: "Academic Integrity in Scientific Publishing Mariann Burright Scholarly Communication Librarian Northwestern University Library."— Presentation transcript:

1 Academic Integrity in Scientific Publishing Mariann Burright Scholarly Communication Librarian Northwestern University Library

2 Scholarly Communication @NU Help with scholarly publishing: – Evaluating journal rankings in your field – Reading your copyright transfer agreement – Using your work after publication – Submitting your theses or dissertation – Publishing open access – Academic integrity

3 Academic Integrity "Red Flags" of Academic Dishonesty (NU Guide) Cheating Plagiarism Fabrication Obtaining Unfair Advantage Aiding and Abetting Falsification of Records and Official Documents Unauthorized Access to academic/ administrative records

4 Plagiarism Definition : The deliberate and knowing presentation of another person's original ideas or creative expressions as one's own (Black's Law Dictionary, 8 th edition, 2004). Ethical but not a legal offense Different from copyright infringement which is a legal offense Direct copying, with minor alterations Remedy: use quotes around exact words and cite source Paraphrasing, expressing same idea with different words Remedy: use quotes, cite author Improper attribution, giving only partial credit to the author Remedy: cite source after conveying the whole idea

5 Fabrication "falsifying or inventing any information, data or citation; presenting data that were not gathered in accordance with standard guidelines defining the appropriate methods for collecting or generating data and failing to include an accurate account of the method by which the data were gathered or collected." From the Northwestern University Academic Integrity: A Basic Guide. September 2010.

6 Copyright Infringement Definition: violating any of the exclusive rights of a copyright owner to: (1) reproduce (2) prepare derivative works (3) distribute (4) publicly perform (5) display publicly From Copyright Act of the United States, 17 USCA Section 106

7 What that means to you… Anticipate future uses of your work after publication Know your rights and responsibilities in signing a copyright transfer agreement Consider open access publishing options Always keep all copies of copyright transfer agreements signed

8 The 'fair use' exemption The Four Factors 17 USC Section 107 …for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. (1) purpose and character of the use (2) nature of the copyrighted work (3) amount of the work used (4) market effect on the work

9 What that means to you… You can rely on fair use to some extent in reproducing, distributing, displaying, performing, and making derivative works in your research and teaching Do a "fair use" analysis before exercising these rights Fair use is a set of guidelines, not strict procedure. Not all academic use is fair use, and not all fair use is academic

10 Resources for help Style Manuals help you avoid plagiarism by providing proper procedure for citations and formatting – The ACS Style Guide, 3 rd Edition – The Council of Science Editors Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers 7 th Edition – The American Medical Association Manual of Style: a guide for authors and editors

11 Resources for help Professional Codes of Ethics – "The Chemist's Creed", The Chemical Professional's Code of Conduct – ACS Ethical and Professional Guidelines – National Institutes of Health (NIH) Bioethics Resources on the Web – American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AICHE) Code of Ethics

12 Resources for help Fair Use Checklists help you avoid copyright infringement Columbia University Copyright Office: www. copyright.columbia.edu/copyright/fair-use/ Purdue University Libraries: www.lib.purdue.edu/uco/CopyrightBasics/fair_use.html

13 Resources for Help Northwestern University Resources – The Northwestern University Academic Integrity: A Basic Guide. September 2010. – The Office of Sponsored Research Policies – The Graduate School

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15 Questions Contact Mariann Burright, Scholarly Communication Librarian m-burright@northwestern.edu 847-467-4637 www.library.northwestern.edu/services/facult y-graduate-students/scholarly-communication

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