

This interactive chart by iThenticate provides further details about the 10 types of plagiarism mentioned above, and suggestions on how to avoid them.ĬOPE provides further details on what constitutes text recycling. All manuscripts are subject to evaluation via CrossCheck/iThenticate. This also applies to all manuscripts where text recycling, redundancy and/or data fabrication are suspected. See COPE flowcharts for further details on COPE’s processes. As such, all instances of suspected plagiarism and/or text recycling will be dealt with in accordance with COPE guidelines and processes (see COPE flowcharts for further details regarding what to expect where plagiarism is suspected in submitted manuscripts and published manuscripts).Īll types of plagiarism, including but not limited to secondary source, invalid source, duplication, paraphrasing, repetitive research, replication, misleading attribution, unethical collaboration, verbatim plagiarism and complete plagiarism will be dealt with in accordance with COPE guidelines and processes.
CROSSCHECK ITHENTICATE CODE
Sociological Science is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and complies with COPE’s Code of Conduct and ethical guidelines. Extensive reuse of text from one’s own prior publications without attribution (text recycling).reproducing any content without attribution and permission) using Crosscheck/iThenticate and considers. Failing to properly attribute ideas, images and data to their original sources The journal will check articles for plagiarism (i.e.Verbatim copying of text from other sources without attribution.Sociological Science will not publish manuscripts where plagiarism or text recycling has been identified.Ĭommon examples of plagiarism include (but are not limited to): Plagiarism & Text Recycling (Self-Plagiarism): The manuscript, and the research on which it is based, meets all applicable ethical standards for research integrity.Any empirical evidence that is used to support the manuscript’s argument is based on data collection and analysis procedures that meet rigorous standards and that are reported in sufficient detail that a trained specialist could replicate the study.The manuscript is written in clear, standard English.The manuscript’s argument is well-structured and logically sound.The manuscript is an original piece of sociological scholarship that has not been published in whole or in part in another peer-reviewed outlet.You are here: Home › For Authors › Publication Criteria Publication Criteria
