Plagiarism Allegations Account for Most Retractions in Major Latin American/Caribbean Databases

被引:35
作者
Almeida, Renan Moritz V. R. [1 ]
Rocha, Karina de Albuquerque [2 ]
Catelani, Fernanda [1 ]
Fontes-Pereira, Aldo Jose [1 ]
Vasconcelos, Sonia M. R. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, Programa Engn Biomed, COPPE, Caixa Postal 68510,Cidade Univ, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
[2] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, IBqM, Inst Bioquim Med Leopoldo de Meis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
关键词
Retractions; Plagiarism; Research integrity; Research misconduct; Correction of the literature; PUBLICATION MISCONDUCT; OPEN-ACCESS; ARTICLES;
D O I
10.1007/s11948-015-9714-5
中图分类号
B82 [伦理学(道德学)];
学科分类号
摘要
This study focuses on retraction notices from two major Latin American/Caribbean indexing databases: SciELO and LILACS. SciELO includes open scientific journals published mostly in Latin America/the Caribbean, from which 10 % are also indexed by Thomson Reuters Web of Knowledge Journal of Citation Reports (JCR). LILACS has a similar geographical coverage and includes dissertations and conference/symposia proceedings, but it is limited to publications in the health sciences. A search for retraction notices was performed in these two databases using the keywords "retracted", "retraction" "withdrawal", "withdrawn", "removed" and "redress". Documents were manually checked to identify those that actually referred to retractions, which were then analyzed and categorized according to the reasons alleged in the notices. Dates of publication/retraction and time to retraction were also recorded. Searching procedures were performed between June and December 2014. Thirty-one retraction notices were identified, fifteen of which were in JCR-indexed journals. "Plagiarism" was alleged in six retractions of this group. Among the non-JCR journals, retraction reasons were alleged in fourteen cases, twelve of which were attributed to "plagiarism". The proportion of retracted articles for the SciELO database was approximately 0.005 %. The reasons alleged in retraction notices may be used as signposts to inform discussions in Latin America on plagiarism and research integrity. At the international level, these results suggest that the correction of the literature is becoming global and is not limited to mainstream international publications.
引用
收藏
页码:1447 / 1456
页数:10
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   Publication misconduct and plagiarism retractions: a Latin American perspective [J].
Alfaro-Toloza, Patricio ;
Mayta-Tristan, Percy ;
Rodriguez-Morales, Alfonso J. .
CURRENT MEDICAL RESEARCH AND OPINION, 2013, 29 (02) :99-100
[2]   The ethics of scholarly publishing: exploring differences in plagiarism and duplicate publication across nations [J].
Amos, Kathleen A. .
JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, 2014, 102 (02) :87-91
[3]   Authorship Diplomacy [J].
Anderson, Melissa S. ;
Kot, Felly Chiteng ;
Shaw, Marta A. ;
Lepkowski, Christine C. ;
De Vries, Raymond G. .
AMERICAN SCIENTIST, 2011, 99 (03) :204-207
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2014, J CITATION REPORTS
[5]  
BOHANNON J., 2014, SCI INSIDER 1211
[6]   Patterns of text reuse in a scientific corpus [J].
Citron, Daniel T. ;
Ginsparg, Paul .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2015, 112 (01) :25-30
[7]   Retraction rates are on the rise [J].
Cokol, Murat ;
Ozbay, Fatih ;
Rodriguez-Esteban, Raul .
EMBO REPORTS, 2008, 9 (01) :2-2
[8]  
COPE, 2009, RETR GUID
[9]  
Corbyn Z., 2009, HIGHER ED TIMES
[10]   Why Growing Retractions Are (Mostly) a Good Sign [J].
Fanelli, Daniele .
PLOS MEDICINE, 2013, 10 (12) :1-6