This is a question related to self-plagiarism. I hope Miguel is reading this!

A collegue and I recently had a study published in ToP.

In preparing that ms the editors wanted us to cut down the length of the 
article so we eliminated a research question completely.

Now we want to publish that research question, and the answer to it; so we are 
using the same data set but analyzing it in terms of an additional variable 
that did not appear in the ToP article.

At what point does using the same data set constitute a breach of ethics? Is it 
OK to reuse that data set for another, independent publication? And in that 
case, how much can we just refer a reader to the ToP article in terms of 
methodological details? Do we repeat all the methods information or do we refer 
back to the first article? 

Do people publish this way and how would you know? My colleague searched and 
searched the literature to see what others have done. If others have used the 
same data set for two publications, then they certainly did not explictly state 
that. Shouldn't one normally, however, state this explicitly?

Annette


Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
University of San Diego
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA 92110
619-260-4006
[email protected]

---
To make changes to your subscription contact:

Bill Southerly ([email protected])

Reply via email to