fbpx
Wikipedia

Scientific literature

Scientific literature comprises academic papers that report original empirical and theoretical work in the natural and social sciences. Within a field of research, relevant papers are often referred to as "the literature". Academic publishing is the process of contributing the results of one's research into the literature, which often requires a peer-review process.

The frontispiece for some early scientific literature published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society

Original scientific research published for the first time in scientific journals is called the primary literature. Patents and technical reports, for minor research results and engineering and design work (including computer software), can also be considered primary literature.

Secondary sources include review articles (which summarize the findings of published studies to highlight advances and new lines of research) and books (for large projects or broad arguments, including compilations of articles).

Tertiary sources might include encyclopedias and similar works intended for broad public consumption.

Types of scientific publications

Scientific literature can include the following kinds of publications:[1]

Literature may also be published in areas considered to be "grey", as they are published outside of traditional channels.[1] This material is customarily not indexed by major databases and can include manuals, theses and dissertations, or newsletters and bulletins.[1]

The significance of different types of the scientific publications can vary between disciplines and change over time.[citation needed] According to James G. Speight and Russell Foote, peer-reviewed journals are the most prominent and prestigious form of publication.[2] University presses are more prestigious than commercial press publication.[3] The status of working papers and conference proceedings depends on the discipline; they are typically more important in the applied sciences. The value of publication as a preprint or scientific report on the web has in the past been low, but in some subjects, such as mathematics or high energy physics, it is now an accepted alternative.[citation needed]

Scientific papers and articles

Scientific papers have been categorised into ten types. Eight of these carry specific objectives, while the other two can vary depending on the style and the intended goal.[4]

Papers that carry specific objectives are:[4]

  • An original article provides new information from original research supported by evidence.
  • Case reports are unique events[clarification needed] that researchers read to obtain information on the subject.
  • A technical note is a description of a technique or piece of equipment that has been modified from an existing one to be new and more effective.
  • A pictorial essay is a series of high-quality images published for teaching purposes.
  • A review is a detailed analysis of recent developments on a topic.
  • A commentary is a short summary of an author's personal experience.
  • Editorials are short reviews or critiques of original articles.
  • Letters to the editor are communications directed to the editor of an article to ask questions and provide constructive criticism.

The following two categories are variable, including for example historical articles and speeches:[4]

  • "Nonscientific material" This type of material comes from the result of an article being published.[clarification needed] It does not advance an article scientifically but instead contributes to its reputation as a scientific article.
  • "Other": Other types of papers not listed under non-scientific material or in any of the above eight categories. They can vary depending on the objective and style of the article.

Scientific article

Preparation

The actual day-to-day records of scientific information are kept in research notebooks or logbooks. These are usually kept indefinitely as the basic evidence of the work, and are often kept in duplicate, signed, notarized, and archived. The purpose is to preserve the evidence for scientific priority, and in particular for priority for obtaining patents. They have also been used in scientific disputes. Since the availability of computers, the notebooks in some data-intensive fields have been kept as database records, and appropriate software is commercially available.[5]

The work on a project is typically published as one or more technical reports, or articles. In some fields both are used, with preliminary reports, working papers, or preprints followed by a formal article. Articles are usually prepared at the end of a project, or at the end of components of a particularly large one. In preparing such an article vigorous rules for scientific writing have to be followed.

Language

Often, career advancement depends upon publishing in high-impact journals, which, especially in hard and applied sciences, are usually published in English.[6] Consequently, scientists with poor English writing skills are at a disadvantage when trying to publish in these journals, regardless of the quality of the scientific study itself.[7] Yet many[which?] international universities require publication in these high-impact journals by both their students and faculty. One way that some international authors are beginning to overcome this problem is by contracting with freelance copy editors who are native speakers of English and specialize in ESL (English as a second language) editing to polish their manuscripts' English to a level that high-impact journals will accept.[citation needed]

Structure and style

Although the content of an article is more important than the format, it is customary for scientific articles to follow a standard structure, which varies only slightly in different subjects. Although the IMRAD structure emphasizes the organization of content, and in scientific journal articles, each section (Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion) has unique conventions for scientific writing style.[8]

The following are key guidelines for formatting, although each journal etc will to some extent have its own house style:

  • The title attracts readers' attention and informs them about the contents of the article.[9] Titles are distinguished into three main types: declarative titles (state the main conclusion), descriptive titles (describe a paper's content), and interrogative titles (challenge readers with a question that is answered in the text).[10] Some journals indicate, in their instructions to authors, the type (and length) of permitted titles.
  • The names and affiliations of all authors are given. In the wake of some scientific misconduct cases, publishers often require that all co-authors know and agree on the content of the article.[11]
  • An abstract summarizes the work (in a single paragraph or in several short paragraphs) and is intended to represent the article in bibliographic databases and to furnish subject metadata for indexing services.
  • The context of previous scientific investigations should be presented, by citation of relevant documents in the existing literature, usually in a section called an "Introduction".
  • Empirical techniques, laid out in a section usually called "Materials and Methods", should be described in such a way that a subsequent scientist, with appropriate knowledge of and experience in the relevant field, should be able to repeat the observations and know whether he or she has obtained the same result. This naturally varies between subjects, and does not apply to mathematics and related subjects.
  • Similarly, the results of the investigation, in a section usually called "Results", should be presented in tabular or graphic form (image, chart, schematic, diagram or drawing). These display elements should be accompanied by a caption and should be discussed in the text of the article.
  • Interpretation of the meaning of the results is usually addressed in a "Discussion" or "Conclusions" section. The conclusions drawn should be based on the new empirical results while taking established knowledge into consideration, in such a way that any reader with knowledge of the field can follow the argument and confirm that the conclusions are sound. That is, acceptance of the conclusions must not depend on personal authority, rhetorical skill, or faith.
  • Finally, a "References" or "Literature Cited" section lists the sources cited by the authors.

Peer review

Increasing reliance on digital abstracting services and academic search engines means that the de facto acceptance in the academic discourse is predicted by the inclusion in such selective sources. Commercial providers of proprietary data include Chemical Abstracts Service, Web of Science and Scopus, while open data (and often open source, non-profit and library-led) services include DOAB, DOAJ and (for open access works) Unpaywall (based on CrossRef and Microsoft Academic records enriched with OAI-PMH data from open archives).[12]

Ethics

The transfer of copyright from author to publisher, used by some journals, can be controversial because many authors want to propagate their ideas more widely and re-use their material elsewhere without the need for permission. Usually an author or authors circumvent that problem by rewriting an article and using other pictures. Some publishers may also want publicity for their journal so will approve facsimile reproduction unconditionally; other publishers are more resistant.[citation needed]

In terms of research publications, a number of key issues include and are not restricted to:[13]

  • Honesty. Honesty and integrity is a duty of each author and person, expert-reviewer and member of journal editorial boards.
  • Review process. The peer-review process contributes to the quality control and it is an essential step to ascertain the standing and originality of the research.[14]
    • Redundant Publications. Publications that contain copyrighted and new unpublished material.[15]
    • Data Fabrications. Is the process of purposefully changing data to make the information more in the favor of the author.[15]
  • Ethical standards. Recent journal editorials presented some experience of unscrupulous activities.[16][17]
    • Human Welfare Concerns. The guidelines for human experimentation started during WWII with the Nuremberg Code. It has evolved into three main principles from The Belmont Report. The subject must be able to make their own choices to protect themselves, benefits must outweigh the risks, and subjects must be evaluated for their selection and benefits must go to all of society.[15]
    • Animal Welfare Concerns. Is the ethical care of animals in scientific experiments. The APS has set strict guidelines and regulations to stop animals from being unnecessarily harmed in experiments. These are being updated regularly by the APS and is a federal law in the United States enforced by DHHS.[15]
  • Authorship. Who may claim a right to authorship?[13] In which order should the authors be listed?
    • Conflicts of Interests. This is referring to the biased assumption due to private interest. It can be done knowingly or not. This is unethical because it makes data inaccurate.[15]
    • Authors Disputes. The authorship of an article is simply the author of the article. The ethical issue with this is when there are two people that believe to be the author, but there is only one true author. There are guidelines to help pick which get authorship of the writing. The one that does not get authorship is put in the acknowledgments. The guidelines come from NIH and The Council of Science Editors.[15]

History

The first recorded editorial pre-publication peer-review occurred in 1665 by the founding editor of Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Henry Oldenburg.[18][19]

Technical and scientific books were a specialty of David Van Nostrand, and his Engineering Magazine re-published contemporary scientific articles.

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c Öchsner, Andreas (2013), "Types of Scientific Publications", Introduction to Scientific Publishing, SpringerBriefs in Applied Sciences and Technology, Springer Berlin Heidelberg, pp. 9–21, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-38646-6_3, ISBN 9783642386459
  2. ^ Speight, James G.; Foote, Russell (2011-04-27). Ethics in Science and Engineering. John Wiley & Sons. p. 241. ISBN 9781118104842.
  3. ^ "Evaluation based on scientific publishing: Evaluating books". University of Oulu. Retrieved November 4, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c Peh, Wilfred (2008). "Basic structure and types of scientific papers". Effective Medical Writing. 49 (7): 522–5. PMID 18695858 – via Singapore Medical Journal.
  5. ^ Talbott, T.; M. Peterson; J. Schwidder; J.D. Myers (2005). "Adapting the electronic laboratory notebook for the semantic era". International Symposium on Collaborative Technologies and Systems. Los Alamitos, CA, US: IEEE Computer Society. pp. 136–143. doi:10.1109/ISCST.2005.1553305. ISBN 0-7695-2387-0.
  6. ^ "MEDLINE Fact Sheet". Washington DC: United States National Library of Medicine. from the original on October 16, 2011. Retrieved October 15, 2011.
  7. ^ Pan, Z; Gao, J (2006). "Crossing the language limitations". PLOS Medicine. 3 (9): E410. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030410. PMC 1576334. PMID 17002510.
  8. ^ Mogull, Scott A. (2017). Scientific And Medical Communication: A Guide For Effective Practice. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781138842557.
  9. ^ Langdon-Neuner, Elise (2007). "Titles in medical articles: What do we know about them?". The Write Stuff. 16 (4): 158–160. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  10. ^ Vasilev, Martin. "How to write a good title for journal articles". JEPS Bulletin. European Federation of Psychology Students' Associations. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  11. ^ Scientific fraud#Responsibility of authors and of coauthors
  12. ^ Miguel, Sandra; Chinchilla-Rodriguez, Zaida; de Moya-Anegón, Félix (2011). "Open access and Scopus: A new approach to scientific visibility from the standpoint of access" (PDF). Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 62 (6): 1130–1145. doi:10.1002/asi.21532. hdl:10760/16100. S2CID 5924132.
  13. ^ a b Hubert Chanson (2008). Digital Publishing, Ethics and Hydraulic Engineering: The Elusive or "Boring" Bore?. In: Stefano Pagliara 2nd International Junior Researcher and Engineer Workshop on Hydraulic Structures (IJREW'08), Pisa, Italy, Keynote, pp. 3-13, 30 July-1 August 2008. ISBN 978-88-8492-568-8.
  14. ^ Hubert Chanson (2007). "Research Quality, Publications and Impact in Civil Engineering into the 21st Century. Publish or Perish, Commercial versus Open Access, Internet versus Libraries ?". Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering. 34 (8): 946–951. doi:10.1139/l07-027.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Benos, Dale J.; Fabres, Jorge; Farmer, John; Gutierrez, Jessica P.; Hennessy, Kristin; Kosek, David; Lee, Joo Hyoung; Olteanu, Dragos; Russell, Tara (2005–2006). "Ethics and scientific publication". Advances in Physiology Education. 29 (2): 59–74. doi:10.1152/advan.00056.2004. ISSN 1043-4046. PMID 15905149. S2CID 27019082.
  16. ^ D. Mavinic (2006). "The "Art" of Plagiarism". Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering. 33 (3): iii–vi. doi:10.1139/l06-901.
  17. ^ "Publication Ethical Standards: Guidelines and Procedures". AIAA Journal. 45 (8): 1794. 2007. Bibcode:2007AIAAJ..45.1794.. doi:10.2514/1.32639.
  18. ^ Wagner (2006) p. 220-1
  19. ^ Select Committee on Science and Technology. "The Origin of the Scientific Journal and the Process of Peer Review". Parliament of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 5 December 2014.

scientific, literature, information, about, journal, article, databases, abstract, indexing, services, list, academic, databases, search, engines, broader, coverage, this, topic, academic, publishing, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, dis. For information about journal article databases and abstract and indexing services see List of academic databases and search engines For broader coverage of this topic see Academic publishing This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Scientific literature news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Scientific literature comprises academic papers that report original empirical and theoretical work in the natural and social sciences Within a field of research relevant papers are often referred to as the literature Academic publishing is the process of contributing the results of one s research into the literature which often requires a peer review process The frontispiece for some early scientific literature published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society Original scientific research published for the first time in scientific journals is called the primary literature Patents and technical reports for minor research results and engineering and design work including computer software can also be considered primary literature Secondary sources include review articles which summarize the findings of published studies to highlight advances and new lines of research and books for large projects or broad arguments including compilations of articles Tertiary sources might include encyclopedias and similar works intended for broad public consumption Contents 1 Types of scientific publications 1 1 Scientific papers and articles 2 Scientific article 2 1 Preparation 2 2 Language 2 3 Structure and style 3 Peer review 4 Ethics 5 History 6 See also 7 References 8 FootnotesTypes of scientific publications EditScientific literature can include the following kinds of publications 1 Scientific articles published in scientific journals Patents in the relevant subject for example biological patents and chemical patents Books wholly written by one author or a few co authors Edited volumes where each chapter is the responsibility of a different author or group of authors while the editor is responsible for determining the scope of the project keeping the work on schedule and ensuring consistency of style and content presentations at academic conferences especially those organized by learned societies Government reports such as a forensic investigation conducted by a government agency such as the NTSB Scientific publications on the World Wide Web although e g scientific journals are now commonly published on the web Books technical reports pamphlets and working papers issued by individual researchers or research organizations on their own initiative these are sometimes organized into a series Literature may also be published in areas considered to be grey as they are published outside of traditional channels 1 This material is customarily not indexed by major databases and can include manuals theses and dissertations or newsletters and bulletins 1 The significance of different types of the scientific publications can vary between disciplines and change over time citation needed According to James G Speight and Russell Foote peer reviewed journals are the most prominent and prestigious form of publication 2 University presses are more prestigious than commercial press publication 3 The status of working papers and conference proceedings depends on the discipline they are typically more important in the applied sciences The value of publication as a preprint or scientific report on the web has in the past been low but in some subjects such as mathematics or high energy physics it is now an accepted alternative citation needed Scientific papers and articles Edit Scientific papers have been categorised into ten types Eight of these carry specific objectives while the other two can vary depending on the style and the intended goal 4 Papers that carry specific objectives are 4 An original article provides new information from original research supported by evidence Case reports are unique events clarification needed that researchers read to obtain information on the subject A technical note is a description of a technique or piece of equipment that has been modified from an existing one to be new and more effective A pictorial essay is a series of high quality images published for teaching purposes A review is a detailed analysis of recent developments on a topic A commentary is a short summary of an author s personal experience Editorials are short reviews or critiques of original articles Letters to the editor are communications directed to the editor of an article to ask questions and provide constructive criticism The following two categories are variable including for example historical articles and speeches 4 Nonscientific material This type of material comes from the result of an article being published clarification needed It does not advance an article scientifically but instead contributes to its reputation as a scientific article Other Other types of papers not listed under non scientific material or in any of the above eight categories They can vary depending on the objective and style of the article Scientific article EditFor broader class of these articles see Scholarly article See also Types of scientific journal articles Preparation Edit The actual day to day records of scientific information are kept in research notebooks or logbooks These are usually kept indefinitely as the basic evidence of the work and are often kept in duplicate signed notarized and archived The purpose is to preserve the evidence for scientific priority and in particular for priority for obtaining patents They have also been used in scientific disputes Since the availability of computers the notebooks in some data intensive fields have been kept as database records and appropriate software is commercially available 5 The work on a project is typically published as one or more technical reports or articles In some fields both are used with preliminary reports working papers or preprints followed by a formal article Articles are usually prepared at the end of a project or at the end of components of a particularly large one In preparing such an article vigorous rules for scientific writing have to be followed Language Edit See also Impact factor and Copy editing Often career advancement depends upon publishing in high impact journals which especially in hard and applied sciences are usually published in English 6 Consequently scientists with poor English writing skills are at a disadvantage when trying to publish in these journals regardless of the quality of the scientific study itself 7 Yet many which international universities require publication in these high impact journals by both their students and faculty One way that some international authors are beginning to overcome this problem is by contracting with freelance copy editors who are native speakers of English and specialize in ESL English as a second language editing to polish their manuscripts English to a level that high impact journals will accept citation needed Structure and style Edit Main article IMRAD Although the content of an article is more important than the format it is customary for scientific articles to follow a standard structure which varies only slightly in different subjects Although the IMRAD structure emphasizes the organization of content and in scientific journal articles each section Introduction Methods Results and Discussion has unique conventions for scientific writing style 8 The following are key guidelines for formatting although each journal etc will to some extent have its own house style The title attracts readers attention and informs them about the contents of the article 9 Titles are distinguished into three main types declarative titles state the main conclusion descriptive titles describe a paper s content and interrogative titles challenge readers with a question that is answered in the text 10 Some journals indicate in their instructions to authors the type and length of permitted titles The names and affiliations of all authors are given In the wake of some scientific misconduct cases publishers often require that all co authors know and agree on the content of the article 11 An abstract summarizes the work in a single paragraph or in several short paragraphs and is intended to represent the article in bibliographic databases and to furnish subject metadata for indexing services The context of previous scientific investigations should be presented by citation of relevant documents in the existing literature usually in a section called an Introduction Empirical techniques laid out in a section usually called Materials and Methods should be described in such a way that a subsequent scientist with appropriate knowledge of and experience in the relevant field should be able to repeat the observations and know whether he or she has obtained the same result This naturally varies between subjects and does not apply to mathematics and related subjects Similarly the results of the investigation in a section usually called Results should be presented in tabular or graphic form image chart schematic diagram or drawing These display elements should be accompanied by a caption and should be discussed in the text of the article Interpretation of the meaning of the results is usually addressed in a Discussion or Conclusions section The conclusions drawn should be based on the new empirical results while taking established knowledge into consideration in such a way that any reader with knowledge of the field can follow the argument and confirm that the conclusions are sound That is acceptance of the conclusions must not depend on personal authority rhetorical skill or faith Finally a References or Literature Cited section lists the sources cited by the authors Peer review EditMain article Scholarly peer review Increasing reliance on digital abstracting services and academic search engines means that the de facto acceptance in the academic discourse is predicted by the inclusion in such selective sources Commercial providers of proprietary data include Chemical Abstracts Service Web of Science and Scopus while open data and often open source non profit and library led services include DOAB DOAJ and for open access works Unpaywall based on CrossRef and Microsoft Academic records enriched with OAI PMH data from open archives 12 Ethics EditThe transfer of copyright from author to publisher used by some journals can be controversial because many authors want to propagate their ideas more widely and re use their material elsewhere without the need for permission Usually an author or authors circumvent that problem by rewriting an article and using other pictures Some publishers may also want publicity for their journal so will approve facsimile reproduction unconditionally other publishers are more resistant citation needed In terms of research publications a number of key issues include and are not restricted to 13 Honesty Honesty and integrity is a duty of each author and person expert reviewer and member of journal editorial boards Review process The peer review process contributes to the quality control and it is an essential step to ascertain the standing and originality of the research 14 Redundant Publications Publications that contain copyrighted and new unpublished material 15 Data Fabrications Is the process of purposefully changing data to make the information more in the favor of the author 15 Ethical standards Recent journal editorials presented some experience of unscrupulous activities 16 17 Human Welfare Concerns The guidelines for human experimentation started during WWII with the Nuremberg Code It has evolved into three main principles from The Belmont Report The subject must be able to make their own choices to protect themselves benefits must outweigh the risks and subjects must be evaluated for their selection and benefits must go to all of society 15 Animal Welfare Concerns Is the ethical care of animals in scientific experiments The APS has set strict guidelines and regulations to stop animals from being unnecessarily harmed in experiments These are being updated regularly by the APS and is a federal law in the United States enforced by DHHS 15 Authorship Who may claim a right to authorship 13 In which order should the authors be listed Conflicts of Interests This is referring to the biased assumption due to private interest It can be done knowingly or not This is unethical because it makes data inaccurate 15 Authors Disputes The authorship of an article is simply the author of the article The ethical issue with this is when there are two people that believe to be the author but there is only one true author There are guidelines to help pick which get authorship of the writing The one that does not get authorship is put in the acknowledgments The guidelines come from NIH and The Council of Science Editors 15 History EditSee also Scientific writing History The first recorded editorial pre publication peer review occurred in 1665 by the founding editor of Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society Henry Oldenburg 18 19 Technical and scientific books were a specialty of David Van Nostrand and his Engineering Magazine re published contemporary scientific articles See also EditAcknowledgment index Citation index Digital object identifier Open access publishing Grey literature UKSG Research paper mill Scientific communicationReferences EditRobert G Bartle 1990 A brief history of the mathematical literature from American Mathematical Society Footnotes Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scientific literature a b c Ochsner Andreas 2013 Types of Scientific Publications Introduction to Scientific Publishing SpringerBriefs in Applied Sciences and Technology Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 9 21 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 38646 6 3 ISBN 9783642386459 Speight James G Foote Russell 2011 04 27 Ethics in Science and Engineering John Wiley amp Sons p 241 ISBN 9781118104842 Evaluation based on scientific publishing Evaluating books University of Oulu Retrieved November 4 2019 a b c Peh Wilfred 2008 Basic structure and types of scientific papers Effective Medical Writing 49 7 522 5 PMID 18695858 via Singapore Medical Journal Talbott T M Peterson J Schwidder J D Myers 2005 Adapting the electronic laboratory notebook for the semantic era International Symposium on Collaborative Technologies and Systems Los Alamitos CA US IEEE Computer Society pp 136 143 doi 10 1109 ISCST 2005 1553305 ISBN 0 7695 2387 0 MEDLINE Fact Sheet Washington DC United States National Library of Medicine Archived from the original on October 16 2011 Retrieved October 15 2011 Pan Z Gao J 2006 Crossing the language limitations PLOS Medicine 3 9 E410 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 0030410 PMC 1576334 PMID 17002510 Mogull Scott A 2017 Scientific And Medical Communication A Guide For Effective Practice New York Routledge ISBN 9781138842557 Langdon Neuner Elise 2007 Titles in medical articles What do we know about them The Write Stuff 16 4 158 160 Retrieved 25 February 2013 Vasilev Martin How to write a good title for journal articles JEPS Bulletin European Federation of Psychology Students Associations Retrieved 25 February 2013 Scientific fraud Responsibility of authors and of coauthors Miguel Sandra Chinchilla Rodriguez Zaida de Moya Anegon Felix 2011 Open access and Scopus A new approach to scientific visibility from the standpoint of access PDF Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 62 6 1130 1145 doi 10 1002 asi 21532 hdl 10760 16100 S2CID 5924132 a b Hubert Chanson 2008 Digital Publishing Ethics and Hydraulic Engineering The Elusive or Boring Bore In Stefano Pagliara 2nd International Junior Researcher and Engineer Workshop on Hydraulic Structures IJREW 08 Pisa Italy Keynote pp 3 13 30 July 1 August 2008 ISBN 978 88 8492 568 8 Hubert Chanson 2007 Research Quality Publications and Impact in Civil Engineering into the 21st Century Publish or Perish Commercial versus Open Access Internet versus Libraries Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering 34 8 946 951 doi 10 1139 l07 027 a b c d e f Benos Dale J Fabres Jorge Farmer John Gutierrez Jessica P Hennessy Kristin Kosek David Lee Joo Hyoung Olteanu Dragos Russell Tara 2005 2006 Ethics and scientific publication Advances in Physiology Education 29 2 59 74 doi 10 1152 advan 00056 2004 ISSN 1043 4046 PMID 15905149 S2CID 27019082 D Mavinic 2006 The Art of Plagiarism Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering 33 3 iii vi doi 10 1139 l06 901 Publication Ethical Standards Guidelines and Procedures AIAA Journal 45 8 1794 2007 Bibcode 2007AIAAJ 45 1794 doi 10 2514 1 32639 Wagner 2006 p 220 1 Select Committee on Science and Technology The Origin of the Scientific Journal and the Process of Peer Review Parliament of the United Kingdom Retrieved 5 December 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scientific literature amp oldid 1152937497, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.