Plagiarism Policy
Zero tolerance for plagiarism to protect research integrity
Definition
Plagiarism is the use of others' published and unpublished ideas, words, or other intellectual property without proper attribution. This includes direct copying, paraphrasing without credit, self-plagiarism, and presenting others' data or images as one's own.
Types of Plagiarism
Direct Plagiarism
Verbatim copying of text without quotation marks and proper citation.
Paraphrasing Plagiarism
Rephrasing others' ideas without proper attribution.
Self-Plagiarism
Reusing substantial portions of one's own previously published work without disclosure.
Data Fabrication
Presenting invented data or results as genuine research findings.
Image Manipulation
Altering or reusing figures/images in a misleading manner.
Mosaic Plagiarism
Combining text from multiple sources without proper citation, even if individual phrases are modified.
Detection
- All manuscripts are screened using plagiarism detection software before peer review
- A similarity index above 20% (excluding references and common phrases) triggers further investigation
- Editors may conduct additional manual checks at any stage of the review process
Consequences
Depending on the severity:
- Pre-publication: Immediate rejection of the manuscript
- Post-publication: Retraction of the published article with a retraction notice
- Notification: The author's institution and/or funding agency may be informed
- Ban: Authors found guilty of serious plagiarism may be barred from submitting to any Upubscience journal for a specified period
All actions follow COPE guidelines for handling suspected plagiarism.
Author Obligations
Original Work Responsibility
Authors are responsible for ensuring their manuscript is original. All sources must be properly cited. Authors should use quotation marks for direct quotes and obtain permission for reproducing copyrighted material. When in doubt, cite.
Prepare Your Manuscript With Confidence
Review our author guidelines to ensure your submission meets all requirements
Author Guidelines