Plagiarism Policy

Plagiarism is an unethical act that entails the unauthorized appropriation of someone else’s ideas, processes, outcomes, or written content without explicitly acknowledging the original author and source. Self-plagiarism manifests when an author utilizes their own previously published work without providing appropriate citations. This can manifest in the form of republishing the same manuscript across multiple journals or modifying a previous manuscript with new data.

 

Types of Plagiarism

  • Full Plagiarism: This involves using previously published content in its entirety, without any modifications to the text, ideas, or language structure.
  • Partial Plagiarism: This occurs when content from multiple sources is blended together, with an extensive use of unoriginal text.
  • Self Plagiarism: This involves reusing part or all of the content of a published work by the same author without proper referencing.

 

General Conditions:

  • Full, partial, and self-plagiarism are strictly prohibited in Analyte journal.
  • Authors are responsible for ensuring that the manuscript submitted is original work.
  • If utilizing the work or words of others, authors must provide proper and complete citations.
  • Submission of manuscripts containing identical or highly similar research results to multiple journals simultaneously is considered unethical and unacceptable.
  • Authors must always give appropriate recognition to the work of others by including relevant references.