Hi

If you read the comments on the original posting, you will see that one 
respondent actually mentioned the example of Nobel prize winners who published 
much the same research in several different journals, without people objecting. 
 The rational was that different people read different journals and that 
multiple publications was appropriate to reach the entire relevant audience.

Most of the comments are quite negative about the idea of self-plagiarism.  I 
just see having to rewrite something, just for the sake of being different (not 
to make it clearer), as another distraction from doing science.

Take care
Jim

James M. Clark
Professor of Psychology
204-786-9757
204-774-4134 Fax
[email protected]

>>> Rick Froman <[email protected]> 15-Sep-10 11:30 AM >>>
I agree that it is fine to reproduce certain sections of a paper intact in a 
subsequent paper and most people cited in the article didn't seem to have a 
problem with that (especially in the Method section). The main concern is with 
how much of that can be done while still being considered a new publication. I 
think most would agree, the more significant violation would be presenting the 
exact same findings under an entirely different title, changing only the 
specific wording to avoid plagiarism detection. So it is not really the wording 
that is at issue but the originality of the findings. The same findings 
shouldn't be produced in different publications just to pad a CV.

I think the musician analogy breaks down pretty quickly. A musician might play 
the same piece to different audiences (some who might want to relive the 
experience a number of times) hundreds or even thousands of times. Is it really 
then OK for a researcher to publish the same work with a few ad libs here and 
there hundreds or thousands of times to the same scholarly readership? I think 
scholarly publication and live musical performances differ in many respects. I 
do think a musician would lose fans pretty quickly (and many have) by just 
re-packaging old stuff reworked into a new album. As far as publication 
(recording) goes, listeners will feel cheated when buying an album that is 
nothing but previously released songs masquerading as a new album.

Rick

Dr. Rick Froman, Chair
Division of Humanities and Social Sciences
Professor of Psychology
Box 3055
John Brown University
2000 W. University Siloam Springs, AR  72761
[email protected] 
(479)524-7295
http://tinyurl.com/DrFroman 


From: Steven Specht [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2010 11:20 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Self-plagiarism


 I agree with Annette. There are good and better ways to write a succinct 
explanation of the concept of contrast effects in sensory research. Once I had 
invested a great deal of time crafting what I thought was "the" best sentence, 
why would I change it just to avoid plagiarizing myself? I would argue that 
that would've created a lesser quality sentence. Are musicians plagiarizing 
themselves with each new performance of a song? Or when they make an acoustic 
version from an "electric" or orchestrated version?



========================================================

Steven M. Specht, Ph.D.

Professor of Psychology

Department of Psychology

Utica College

Utica, NY 13502

(315) 792-3171

monkeybrain-collagist.blogspot.com<http://monkeybrain-collagist.blogspot.com>



"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and 
convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy."

Martin Luther King Jr.

On Sep 15, 2010, at 11:53 AM, Annette Taylor wrote:





I have to disagree with Miguel here... agree with Barbato. I have spent the 
last decade researching a single paradigm and plan to do so until I retire 
probably. It has taken me years to phrase some of the basics in the most clear 
way so that others can understand what I mean. I don't want to have to think of 
more alternative ways to say some things. I had to really craft the text of the 
basic ideas carefully because I'm trying to explain some relatively abstract 
concepts in the most effective way possible for the listener/reader. So to have 
to redo this in a potentially less effective way to avoid self-plagiarism seems 
down right silly. They are my words that I worked on, and if they form the 
foundation of parts of the introduction and methods section then I can't 
believe it's a problem to reuse them whenever I write about the same topic. In 
fact, I have tried to just free write the methods section in subsequent papers 
and found myself repeating myself verbatim without even trying.

I an left asking myself if we haven't had the pendulum swing too far, once we 
have to worry about repeating parts of introductory explanations to set the 
stage for a new study, as being somehow "dishonest" or lacking "integrity."

Just my 2 cents here. What do the others on the list think?

Annette

Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph. D.
Professor, Psychological Sciences
University of San Diego
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA 92110
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

________________________________
From: Rick Froman [[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2010 7:58 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Self-plagiarism



http://www.the-scientist.com/blog/display/57676/ 

Interesting post on The Scientist.com<http://Scientist.com> with quotes from 
TIPSter (and plagiarism expert) Miguel Roig. (I don't mean that he is good at 
it, just that he knows a lot about it.)

Rick

Rick Froman
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>


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