Reuse in STEM research writing

Author:

Anson Chris M.1,Hall Susanne2,Pemberton Michael3,Moskovitz Cary4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. North Carolina State University

2. California Institute of Technology

3. Georgia Southern University

4. Duke University

Abstract

Abstract Text recycling (hereafter TR), sometimes problematically called “self-plagiarism,” involves the verbatim reuse of text from one’s own existing documents in a newly created text – such as the duplication of a paragraph or section from a published article in a new article. Although plagiarism is widely eschewed across academia and the publishing industry, the ethics of TR are not agreed upon and are currently being vigorously debated. As part of a federally funded (US) National Science Foundation grant, we have been studying TR patterns using several methodologies, including interviews with editors about TR values and practices (Pemberton, Hall, Moskovitz, & Anson, 2019) and digitally mediated text-analytic processes to determine the extent of TR in academic publications in the biological sciences, engineering, mathematical and physical sciences, and social, behavioral, and economic sciences (Anson, Moskovitz, & Anson, 2019). In this article, we first describe and illustrate TR in the context of academic writing. We then explain and document several themes that emerged from interviews with publishers of peer-reviewed academic journals. These themes demonstrate the vexed and unsettled nature of TR as a discursive phenomenon in academic writing and publishing. In doing so, we focus on the complex relationships between personal (role-based) and social (norm-based) aspects of scientific publication, complicating conventional models of the writing process that have inadequately accounted for authorial decisions about accuracy, efficiency, self-representation, adherence to existing or imagined rules and norms, perceptions of ownership and copyright, and fears of impropriety.

Publisher

John Benjamins Publishing Company

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference19 articles.

1. ACS ethical guidelines to publication of chemical research;American Chemical Society,1986

2. Tracking the mind’s eye: A new technology for researching 21st century writing and reading processes;Anson;College Composition and Communication,2012

3. A text-analytic method for identifying text recycling in STEM research reports;Anson;Journal of Writing Analytics,2019

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Peer Review in the Age of Generative AI;Journal of the Association for Information Systems;2024

2. Common Misconceptions about Text Recycling in Scientific Writing;BioScience;2022-10-13

3. Authorship and Publication Matters: Credit and Credibility;Anesthesiology;2021-05-27

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