Research and Publication Ethics
Proceedings of the National
Institute of Ecology of the Republic of Korea (PNIE) adheres to the
ethical guidelines for research and publication described in Guidelines on Good
Publication (http://publicationethics.org/resources/guidelines) and the ICMJE
Guidelines (http://www.icmje.org).
1. Authorship
PNIE follows the recommendations for authorship by the
International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE;
http://www.icmje.org/recommendations/). Authorship credit should be based on 1)
substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the
acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data for the work; 2) drafting the
work or revising it critically for important intellectual content; 3) final
approval of the version to be published; and 4) agreement to be accountable for
all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or
integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
Authors should meet conditions of 1, 2, 3, and 4. After the initial submission
of a manuscript, any changes whatsoever in authorship (adding author(s),
deleting author(s), or rearranging the order of authors) must be explained by a
letter to the editor from the authors concerned. This letter must be signed by
all authors of the paper. Copyright assignment must also be completed by every
author.
• Corresponding author
and first author: PNIE does not allow multiple corresponding authors for one
article. Only one author should correspond with the editorial office and
readers for one article. PNIE does accept notice of equal contribution for the
first author when the study was clearly performed by co-first authors.
• Correction of authorship after publication: PNIE does not correct authorship after publication unless a mistake has been made by the editorial staff. Authorship may be changed before publication but after submission when an authorship correction is requested by all of the authors involved with the manuscript.
2. Review Process
PNIE is a peer-reviewed (single-blind peer review) journal
and the manuscripts are reviewed by two referees with abundant research
experience in the relevant fields of the submitted manuscript, and the final
editorial decision is made by the Editorial Committee, based on the referees’
evaluations.
After reviewing, the manuscript is returned to the
corresponding author for revision, the revised manuscript must be re-submitted
within one month. If it is not submitted within the designated period without
any special reasons, such manuscript is deemed to be withdrawn from evaluation
voluntarily.
3. Ethical Aspects
The author should not use ideas, research or records of
others without quoting them. The corresponding author is responsible for all
the contents of the manuscript. Authors must deposit data, strains or other materials
in scientific collections (e.g., culture collections, herbaria, GenBank, etc.)
to make it possible to repeat the experiments and perform future research.
Research published in the PNIE must have been conducted in accordance with
institutional, national and international guidelines concerning the use of
animals in research and/or the sampling of endangered species. For the policies
on research and publication ethics that are not stated in these instructions,
the Guidelines on Good Publication (http://publicationethics.org/resources/guidelines),
Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals
(http://www.icmje.org/icmje-recommendations. pdf) and the Principles of
Transparency and Best Practice in Scholarly Publishing (http://doaj.org/bestpractice).
4. Conflict of Interest Statement
The corresponding author must inform the editor of any
potential conflicts of interest that could influence the authors’
interpretation of the data. Examples of potential conflicts of interest are
financial support from or connections to pharmaceutical companies, and
academically related issues. In particular, all sources of funding applicable
to the study should be explicitly stated.
5. Secondary Publication
It is possible to republish manuscripts if the manuscripts
satisfy the conditions of secondary publication of the ICMJE Recommendations (http://www.icmje.org/urm_main.html).
6. Originality, Plagiarism and
Duplicate Publication
All submitted manuscripts should be original and should not
be under consideration by other scientific journals for publication at the same
time. No part of the accepted manuscript should be duplicated in any other
scientific journal without the prior permission of the Editorial board.
Submitted manuscripts are screened for possible plagiarism or duplicate
publication by Similarity Check upon arrival. If plagiarism or duplicate
publication is detected, the manuscripts may be rejected, the authors will be
announced in the journal, and their institutions will be informed. There will
also be penalties for the authors. Submission of a manuscript implies that: 1)
the work description has not been published; 2) it is not under consideration
for publication elsewhere; and 3) its publication has been approved by all
co-authors.
7. Process for Managing Research and
Publication Misconduct
When the journal faces suspected cases of research and
publication misconduct such as redundant (duplicate) publication, plagiarism,
fraudulent or fabricated data, changes in authorship, an undisclosed conflict
of interest, ethical problems with a submitted manuscript, a reviewer who has
appropriated an author’s idea or data, complaints against editors, and so on,
the resolution process will follow the flowchart provided by the Committee on
Publication Ethics (http://publicationethics.org/resources/flowcharts). The
discussion and decision on the suspected cases are carried out by the PNIE
Editorial Board and Research Ethics Committee of the National Institute of
Ecology (https://www.nie.re.kr/nie/main/contents.do?menuNo=200189).
8. Process for Handling Article
Correction, Retraction, and Editorial Expression of Concern
Cases that require editorial expressions of concern or retraction shall follow the COPE flowcharts available from: http://publicationethics.org/resources/flowcharts. If correction needs, it will follow the ICMJE Recommendation for Corrections, Retractions, Republications and Version Control available from: http://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/publishing-and-editorial-issues/corrections-and-version-control.html as follows: Honest errors are a part of science and publishing and require publication of a correction when they are detected. Corrections are needed for errors of fact. Minimum standards are as follows: First, it shall publish a correction notice as soon as possible detailing changes from and citing the original publication on both an electronic and numbered print page that is included in an electronic or a print Table of Contents to ensure proper indexing; Second, it shall post a new article version with details of the changes from the original version and the date(s) on which the changes were made through K-Mark; Third, it shall archive all prior versions of the article. This archive can be either directly accessible to readers; and Fourth, previous electronic versions shall prominently note that there are more recent versions of the article via K-Mark.
9. Editorial Responsibilities
The Editorial Board will continuously work to monitor and
safeguard publication ethics: guidelines for retracting articles; maintenance of
the integrity of the academic record; preclusion of business needs from
compromising intellectual and ethical standards; publishing corrections,
clarifications, retractions, and apologies when needed; and excluding
plagiarism and fraudulent data. The editors maintain the following
responsibilities: responsibility and authority to reject and accept articles;
avoiding any conflict of interest with respect to articles they reject or
accept; promoting publication of corrections or retractions when errors are
found; and preservation of the anonymity of reviewers.
10. Copyright Information
PNIE is an Open Access (OA) journal and authors retain
copyright of their work through a Creative Commons attribution license (CC)
that clearly states how readers can copy, distribute, and use their attributed
research, free of charge. All of which helps make articles available to the
widest audience, and contributes to the furthering of research in ways that
would have seemed impossible before. PNIE adapts CC-BY-NC license that lets
others remix, adapt, and build upon your work non-commercially, and although
their new works must also acknowledge you and be non-commercial, they don’t
have to license their derivative works on the same terms.
PNIE has an author self-archiving policy (Blue : Post-print)
and can self-archiving in compliance with the following.
Public place: All or part of the thesis is posted on the
author's personal website, the website of the institution or organization to
which the author belongs, the website of the organization that supported the
research fund, etc.
Disclosure Conditions: For personal and educational purposes,
compliance with CC-BY-NC regulations, insert hyperlinks in publications, and
post prints and publications after review.
11. Archiving
It is accessible without barrier from KoreaScience
(https://koreascience.or.kr/) or National Library of Korea (http://nl.go.kr) in
the event a journal is no longer published.
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research and publication ethics.pdf |