FFP For Research Ethics
FFP For Research Ethics
FFP For Research Ethics
Cardinal Sins:
FFP
A LOVE STORY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gULc72zRvEg
Fabrication
and
Falsification
FABRICATION
• Cooking up the false data and representing it as the real,
interpreting it and publishing it as research outcomes known as
Fabrication.
• For example: Making a false data table from an
imaginary sample without conducting any research or data
collection.
• Filling up fake data collection forms by single person with
fake names and participants information.
DEFINING FABRICATION
• Fabrication can be defined as an unethical practice of construction
and/or addition of data, observations, or characterizations which
has never happened or occurred during the data collection
process or an experiment.
• Sometimes, fabrication occurs when researcher reports the data
or filled up the research tools before the process is completed.
• An outcome is reported or claims are made on the basis of
incomplete or assumed data, which should be the outcome of
analysis of complete data set.
WHY DO RESEARCHERS FABRICATE THE DATA?
Source: https://www.poynter.org/educators-students/2016/4-guidelines-to-avoid-fabrication-in-your-news-coverage/
Falsification
FALSIFICATION
• An unethical practice to manipulate the research materials,
equipment, or processes, or changing or omitting data or
results such that the research is not accurately represented in
the research record.
• For example: Creating an image by 'splicing and pasting'
together different segments of few images to misrepresent it
as a single image in any experiment.
DEFINING FALSIFICATION
Falsification is manipulating research materials,
equipment, or processes, or changing or omitting
data or results such that the research is not
accurately represented in the research record.”
- Office of Research Integrity
DEFINING FALSIFICATION
• Falsification is defined as a misconduct by changing or
omission of research results (data) to support claims,
hypotheses, other data, etc.
• Falsification can include the manipulation of research
instrumentation, materials, or processes.
• Manipulation of images or representations in a manner
that distorts the data or “reads too much between the
lines” can also be considered falsification.
EXAMPLES OF RESEARCH FALSIFICATION
https://youtu.be/qmdvzMk_k3w
HOW TO PREVENT DATA FALSIFICATION
Source: https://indiankanoon.org/doc/946037/
Source: http://web.stanford.edu/dept/physics/publications/PDFfiles/india.pdf
ACADEMIC RIVALRY?: IT MAY BE
c
THE ANALYSIS OF NEWS ARTICLES:
•Plagiarism of ideas/thoughts
•Plagiarism of old published research work as
new
•Plagiarism of data/process from a research
paper
WHAT IS PLAGIARISM?
University of Essex (2007),
plagiarism is ‘using or copying the
work of others (whether written,
printed or in any other form)
without proper acknowledgement in
any coursework’.
Source: https://communitystandards.stanford.edu/policies-and-guidance/what-plagiarism
CHARACTERISTICS OF PLAGIARISM
• copying or paraphrasing another person's
words without giving proper
acknowledgement,
• Adopting someone’s ideas or data, without
giving credit and without citing the source.
Source: https://www.ox.ac.uk/students/academic/guidance/skills/plagiarism
WHAT IS NOT PLAGIARISM?
• Common Knowledge
• General information that most people know, such as: water
freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
• Information shared by a cultural group, such as the dates of
national holidays or names of Knowledge shared by
members of a certain field, famous heroes.
• such as the fact that the necessary condition for diffraction
of radiation of wavelength λ from a crystalline solid is
given by Bragg’s law.
TYPES OF
PLAGIARISM
MOST COMMON TYPES OF PLAGIARISM
Source: https://www.bowdoin.edu/dean-of-students/conduct-review-board/academic-honesty-and-
plagiarism/common-types-of-plagiarism.html
MOST COMMON TYPES OF PLAGIARISM
Global Verbatim Paraphrasing Patchwork Self-
plagiarism plagiarism plagiarism plagiarism plagiarism
• plagiarizing • directly • rephrasing • Plagiarizing • recycling
an entire copying someone parts of your own
text by someone else’s ideas. different previous
someone else. else’s words. sources and work.
stitching them
together into
a new work.
Source: Streefkerk Raimo (2018) Types of plagiarism and how to recognize them,
https://www.scribbr.com/plagiarism/types-of-plagiarism/
10 TYPES OF PLAGIARISM IDENTIFIED BY TURNITIN
CLONE
• It is also called identical copying.
• One person copies another work (word-for-word) without any
change and claim as his own work.
• No citation or attribution is given to the original author.
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
CTRL+C
• In the written document a significant portion of text copied
from any single source without any alteration then it is called
Ctrl+C kind of plagiarism.
• No citation or attribution is given to the original author.
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
FIND-REPLACE
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
REMIX
• one person collects information from various sources and
mix all together as a single document then claim the work as
their own work.
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
RECYCLE
• Recycle is also called self-plagiarism.
• It refers to the act of borrowing from one’s own previous
document without a proper citation.
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
HYBRID
• In the hybrid type of plagiarism, Perfectly cited source
documents are copied and arranged as a new document
without citation.
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
MASHUP
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
#404 ERROR
• A person creates a document by copying from various
sources and prepare as a single document with the citation.
• but if the citation is inaccurate or it will lead to non-existing
resources then it will be called #404 Error.
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
AGGREGATOR
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
RE-TWEET
• If all the written document seems perfect with properly
cited mark but still the document resembles somewhere the
original text’s structure or wordings then it is called Re-Tweet
plagiarism.
Sources:
1. https://www.turnitin.com/static/plagiarism-spectrum/
2. https://www.ilovephd.com/10-types-of-plagiarism-every-academic-writer-should-know/
Source:
https://content.cdntwrk.com/files/aHViPTgzODM3JmNtZD1pdGVtZWRpdG9yaW1hZ2UmZmlsZW5hbWU9aXRlbWVkaXRvcmltYWdlXzVlYjA1ODdjNjF
kZTIucG5nJnZlcnNpb249MDAwMCZzaWc9MGQwNGY2N2NkNTIzMDZjZGYyMTQ4ZjJjMTBmYzZmYTc%253D
Source:
https://content.cdntwrk.com/files/aHViPTgzODM3JmNtZD1pdGVtZWRpdG9yaW1hZ2UmZmlsZW5hbWU9aXRlbWVkaXRvcmltYWdlXzVlYjA1ODdjNjF
kZTIucG5nJnZlcnNpb249MDAwMCZzaWc9MGQwNGY2N2NkNTIzMDZjZGYyMTQ4ZjJjMTBmYzZmYTc%253D
Source:
https://content.cdntwrk.com/files/aHViPTgzODM3JmNtZD1pdGVtZWRpdG9yaW1hZ2UmZmlsZW5hbWU9aXRlbWVkaXRvcmltYWdlXzVlYjA1ODdjNjF
kZTIucG5nJnZlcnNpb249MDAwMCZzaWc9MGQwNGY2N2NkNTIzMDZjZGYyMTQ4ZjJjMTBmYzZmYTc%253D
Source:
https://content.cdntwrk.com/files/aHViPTgzODM3JmNtZD1pdGVtZWRpdG9yaW1hZ2UmZmlsZW5hbWU9aXRlbWVkaXRvcmltYWdlXzVlYjA1ODdjNjF
kZTIucG5nJnZlcnNpb249MDAwMCZzaWc9MGQwNGY2N2NkNTIzMDZjZGYyMTQ4ZjJjMTBmYzZmYTc%253D
Source:
https://content.cdntwrk.com/files/aHViPTgzODM3JmNtZD1pdGVtZWRpdG9yaW1hZ2UmZmlsZW5hbWU9aXRlbWVkaXRvcmltYWdlXzVlYjA1ODdjNjF
kZTIucG5nJnZlcnNpb249MDAwMCZzaWc9MGQwNGY2N2NkNTIzMDZjZGYyMTQ4ZjJjMTBmYzZmYTc%253D
PLAGIARISM SPECTRUM 2.0
Source: https://www.turnitin.com/resources/plagiarism-spectrum-2-0
TOOLS TO DETECT PLAGIARISM
WAYS TO AVOID PLAGIARISM
• Use your own words and develop your own writing
style
• Organize and structure your work in your own way
• Fully reference and acknowledge the work of
others (CITATION)
STYLES OF REFERENCING
•APA style of referencing
•MLA style of referencing
•Harvard style of referencing
•Chicago style of referencing
•IEEE style etc.
REGULATIONS
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLh8n6bU2zs
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kP3odE4pTXw
Thanks