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Cases of Ethical Violation in Research Publications: Through Editorial Decision Making Process

The Journal of Distribution Science / The Journal of Distribution Science, (P)1738-3110; (E)2093-7717
2017, v.15 no.5, pp.49-52
https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.15722/jds.15.5.201705.49
Hwang, Hee-Joong
Lee, Jung-Wan
Kim, Dong-Ho
Shin, Dong-Jin
Kim, Byoung-Goo
Kim, Tae-Joong
Lee, Yong-Ki
Kim, Wan-Ki
Youn, Myoung-Kil
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Abstract

Purpose - To improve and strengthen existing publication and research ethics, KODISA has identified and presented various cases which have violated publication and research ethics and principles in recent years. The editorial office of KODISA has been providing and continues to provide advice and feedback on publication ethics to researchers during peer review and editorial decision making process. Providing advice and feedback on publication ethics will ensure researchers to have an opportunity to correct their mistakes or make appropriate decisions and avoid any violations in research ethics. The purpose of this paper is to identify different cases of ethical violation in research and inform and educate researchers to avoid any violations in publication and research ethics. Furthermore, this article will demonstrate how KODISA journals identify and penalize ethical violations and strengthens its publication ethics and practices. Research design, data and methodology - This paper examines different types of ethical violation in publication and research ethics. The paper identifies and analyzes all ethical violations in research and combines them into five general categories. Those five general types of ethical violations are thoroughly examined and discussed. Results - Ethical violations of research occur in various forms at regular intervals; in other words, unethical researchers tend to commit different types of ethical violations repeatedly at same time. The five categories of ethical violation in research are as follows: (1) Arbitrary changes or additions in author(s) happen frequently in thesis/dissertation related publications. (2) Self plagiarism, submitting same work or mixture of previous works with or without using proper citations, also occurs frequently, but the most common type of plagiarism is changing the statistical results and using them to present as the results of the empirical analysis; (3) Translation plagiarism, another ethical violation in publication, is difficult to detect but occurs frequently; (4) Fabrication of data or statistical analysis also occurs frequently. KODISA requires authors to submit the results of the empirical analysis of the paper (the output of the statistical program) to prevent this type of ethical violation; (5) Mashup or aggregator plagiarism, submitting a mix of several different works with or without proper citations without alterations, is very difficult to detect, and KODISA journals consider this type of plagiarism as the worst ethical violation. Conclusions - There are some individual cases of ethical violation in research and publication that could not be included in the five categories presented throughout the paper. KODISA and its editorial office should continue to develop, revise, and strengthen their publication ethics, to learn and share different ways to detect any ethical violations in research and publication, to train and educate its editorial members and researchers, and to analyze and share different cases of ethical violations with the scholarly community.

keywords
Violations of Research and Publication Ethics, Self-Plagiarism, Fabrication, Translation Plagiarism, Mashup Plagiarism, Aggregator Plagiarism

Reference

1.

Hwang, H. J., Kim, D. H., Youn, M. K., Lee, J. W., & Lee, J. W. (2014). The Standard of Judgment on Plagiarism in Research Ethics and the Guideline of Global Journals for KODISA. Journal of Distribution Science, 12(6), 15‐20. http://dx.doi.org/10.15722/jds.12.6.201406.15

2.

Hwang, H. J., Lee, J. H., Lee, J. W., Kim, Y. E., Yang, H. C., Youn, M. K., & Kim, D. H. (2015). Strengthening Publication Ethics for KODISA Journals: Learning from the Cases of Plagiarism. Journal of Distribution Science, 13(4), 5-8. http://dx.doi.org/10.15722/jds.13.4.201504.5

3.

Hwang, H. J., & Youn, M. K. (2016). Based on Proven Practices in Violation of Research Ethics for the KODISA Journals. The International Journal of Industrial Distribution & Business, 7(1), 5-10. https://doi.org/10.13106/ijidb.2016.vol7.no1.5

The Journal of Distribution Science