Communications of the ACM
Journal of Biomedical Informatics - Special issue: Phylogenetic inferencing: Beyond biology
Collective Wisdom: A Modest Proposal to Improve Peer Review, Part 1
IEEE Internet Computing
Open issues in organizing computer systems conferences
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
Before and after WOWCS: a literature survey, a list of papers we wish had been submitted
WOWCS'08 Proceedings of the conference on Organizing Workshops, Conferences, and Symposia for Computer Systems
Software reuse and plagiarism: a code of practice
ITiCSE '09 Proceedings of the 14th annual ACM SIGCSE conference on Innovation and technology in computer science education
Detection of simple plagiarism in computer science papers
COLING '10 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Computational Linguistics
Copyright for interactive systems: stratagems for tourism and cultural heritage promotion
HCITOCH'10 Proceedings of the First international conference on Human-computer interaction, tourism and cultural heritage
Developing a corpus of plagiarised short answers
Language Resources and Evaluation
Editor's comments: when is enough, enough?
MIS Quarterly
Text reuse with ACL: (upward) trends
ACL '12 Proceedings of the ACL-2012 Special Workshop on Rediscovering 50 Years of Discoveries
Experiments with filtered detection of similar academic papers
AIMSA'12 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Artificial Intelligence: methodology, systems, and applications
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We are all too aware of the ravages of misconduct in the academic community. Students submit assignments inherited from their friends, online papermills provide term papers on popular topics, and occasionally researchers are found falsifying data or publishing the work of others as their own.This article examines a lesser-known but potentially no less bothersome form of scientific misconduct, namely self-plagiarism. Self-plagiarism occurs when authors reuse portions of their previous writings in subsequent research papers. Occasionally, the derived paper is simply a retitled and reformatted version of the original one, but more frequently it is assembled from bits and pieces of previous work.