估计生物医学会议摘要中文本重叠的普遍性。

IF 7.2 Q1 ETHICS
Nick Kinney, Araba Wubah, Miguel Roig, Harold R Garner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:科学家通过出版物和在科学会议上的展示来交流进展和信息。我们之前的研究表明,应用于Medline的文本相似度分析可以识别和量化同行评议的生物医学期刊中的剽窃和重复出版物。在本研究中,我们将相同的分析应用于大量会议摘要样本。方法:我们下载了63个生物医学会议的207个国内和国际会议的144,149篇摘要。两两比较使用eTBLAST:一个文本相似度引擎。然后,一位领域专家回顾了高度相似的摘要的随机样本(总共1500篇),以估计文本重叠的程度和可能的抄袭。结果:我们的主要发现表明,绝大多数文本重叠发生在同一会议(2%)和同一会议的会议之间(3%),这两种情况都明显高于剽窃的情况,抄袭发生率不到0.5%。结论:该分析表明,在科学会议上发表的论文摘要中的文本重叠是同行评议出版物的十分之一,但剽窃率与之前在同行评议出版物中测量的大致相同。后一项发现强调了监督科学会议提交的必要性——就像现在在向同行评议期刊提交手稿时所做的那样——以提高科学传播的完整性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Estimating the prevalence of text overlap in biomedical conference abstracts.

Estimating the prevalence of text overlap in biomedical conference abstracts.

Estimating the prevalence of text overlap in biomedical conference abstracts.

Estimating the prevalence of text overlap in biomedical conference abstracts.

Background: Scientists communicate progress and exchange information via publication and presentation at scientific meetings. We previously showed that text similarity analysis applied to Medline can identify and quantify plagiarism and duplicate publications in peer-reviewed biomedical journals. In the present study, we applied the same analysis to a large sample of conference abstracts.

Methods: We downloaded 144,149 abstracts from 207 national and international meetings of 63 biomedical conferences. Pairwise comparisons were made using eTBLAST: a text similarity engine. A domain expert then reviewed random samples of highly similar abstracts (1500 total) to estimate the extent of text overlap and possible plagiarism.

Results: Our main findings indicate that the vast majority of textual overlap occurred within the same meeting (2%) and between meetings of the same conference (3%), both of which were significantly higher than instances of plagiarism, which occurred in less than .5% of abstracts.

Conclusions: This analysis indicates that textual overlap in abstracts of papers presented at scientific meetings is one-tenth that of peer-reviewed publications, yet the plagiarism rate is approximately the same as previously measured in peer-reviewed publications. This latter finding underscores a need for monitoring scientific meeting submissions - as is now done when submitting manuscripts to peer-reviewed journals - to improve the integrity of scientific communications.

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