17.0 PUBLISHING Flashcards
17.1 Plagiarism
A registrant must not present portions or elements of another’s work or data as their own, even if the other work or data source is cited occasionally.
17.2 Publication credit
A registrant must only take responsibility and credit, including authorship credit, for work they have actually performed or to which they have substantially contributed.
17.3 Co-authorship credit
A registrant must ensure that principal authorship and other publication credits accurately reflect the relative scientific or professional contributions of the individuals involved, regardless of their relative status.
17.4 Inappropriate basis for credit
A registrant is not justified in taking authorship credit based solely on holding an institutional position, such as Department Chair.
17.5 Minor contributions
A registrant must acknowledge, in footnotes, an introductory statement, or in another appropriate manner, the minor contributors to the research or to the writing for publication.
17.6 Student credit
A registrant must identify a student as principal author on any multiple authored article which is substantially based on the student’s dissertation or thesis.
17.7 Duplicate publication
A registrant must not publish as original data, any data which have previously been published. This prohibition does not prevent the republication of such data when it is accompanied by a proper acknowledgment.
17.8 Sharing data with others
After research results are published, a registrant must not withhold the data on which their conclusions are based from other competent professionals who
seek to verify the substantive claims of the research through re-analysis, and who intend to use such data only for that purpose.
17.9 Limitations on 17.8
Standard 17.8 only applies if the confidentiality of the research participants can be protected and any legal rights concerning proprietary data are not violated.