The Dos and Don'ts of Text Recycling
Publishing is an integral part of a researcher’s development; it is not only important for validating one’s work but for expanding the knowledge base in your field of research. A nerve-wracking aspect of publishing is the peer review process. When a researcher/author submits their manuscripts for publication, they anticipate that experts in their field will review their submission and provide feedback on its novelty, accuracy and even its general interest. They also expect the originality of their manuscript to be assessed; therefore, authors are careful to avoid text recycling/self-plagiarism and plagiarism.
In recent years, opinions about the definition and use of recycled text have been fervently debated amongst authors and publishers alike, prompting leaders in the field to evaluate if, when and where text recycling may be appropriate. Below is a crash course on the ethics of text recycling and some basic practices for scientific writing, designed to help authors navigate publishing scientific research.
What is Text Recycling?
also known as self-plagiarism, refers to the repurposing of text by an author from a previous publication in a new manuscript. This practice often includes, but is not limited to, the reuse of language from the author’s published research paper, dissertation and/or book without citation.As the use of plagiarism detection software, like and , becomes a publishing standard, the debate over the ethics of text recycling has increased. Although, sentiments have slowly evolved on text recycling, a glaring roadblock has emerged—, the lack of consensus around guidelines for appropriate text recycling. Additionally, researchers continue to express concerns about how the pervasive use of text recycling may (by churning out multiple manuscripts that are only cosmetically different) and potentially breach author-publisher contracts. Meanwhile, groups like the have argued that limited text recycling, in the introduction and/or methods and materials sections of papers, is both acceptable, and unlikely to pose legal risk by breaching author-publisher contracts.
TRRP is a National Science Foundation-funded, multi-institution and multidisciplinary research project that performed the first comprehensive investigation on text recycling in STEM research. In its mission to educate both researchers and editors on text recycling, TRRP suggests that editors rethink their distaste for text recycling and take a more nuanced approach when evaluating text overlap in submissions.
Plagiarism vs. Text Recycling
Unlike text recycling, the writing community defines —as the uncredited use of someone else’s published ideas, text or images and considers the practice to be unacceptable in scientific writing and publishing. Flagrant and/or recurrent incidents by an author may trigger and can potentially lead to a ban by the publisher. Plagiarism is so broadly condemned that the term “text recycling” is preferred by advocates in place of self-plagiarism to avoid the confusion and stigma surrounding plagiarism. Another difference between text recycling and plagiarism is that, according to TRRP, , ranging from acceptable and ethical to illegal.A Case for Text Recycling
Reputable scientific publishers are committed to maintaining the scientific record and ensuring that readers have access to accurate, representative data. Publishers like the American Society for °®¶¹´«Ã½ (ASM) develop and provide robust resources for authors that address common unethical issues in publishing. For example, dedicates an entire section to how to “avoid plagiarism, including self-plagiarism/text recycling.” The inclusion of text recycling as a practice to avoid on publishing ethics checklists reveals that despite the efforts of groups like TRRP, the stigma associated with text recycling persists.However, even the ASM Journals Publishing Ethics Checklist states that “verbatim text is allowed in the Materials and Methods section, provided the information is cited appropriately.” This is a form of generative recycling. ASM also allows developmental recycling since the reuse of text from conference materials, like abstracts/poster presentations and preprints with appropriate citations is permitted. These allowances suggest that authors can recycle text in new submissions within strict, specified parameters.
It is important to acknowledge how rare it is to find a manuscript without some recycled text. A on text recycling in STEM evaluated 400 published papers and found approximately 3 recycled sentences per article, with only 15% of research groups engaging in significant text recycling. This suggests that researchers regularly reuse text from their previous work and are more likely to alter recycled text rather than reuse large portions of verbatim language.
There are multiple reasons why an author recycles text. For example, it may be efficient for an author to recycle text that describes a model organism, signaling pathway or summarizing results from their previous work in a new submission if it expands upon the same subject matter. because researchers generally study closely related topics where one study builds upon their previously published work. The results and/or conclusion of an author’s published work often informs their future studies. This kind of incremental knowledge building requires appropriate context, including a rehashing/restating of published research.
To some extent, the nature of how scientific research is conducted makes the practice of text recycling hard to avoid. Prior to submitting a manuscript for publication, researchers have likely produced multiple documents outlining their study, from an Institutional Review Board protocol, grant proposal/report, to conference posters/talks, that are publicly available. The information in these documents is often integral to an author’s study and should be incorporated into their manuscript.
A request by an editor to rework recycled text for further consideration by a journal mainly results in authors making superficial revisions by using synonyms or changing syntax. An author may even remove pertinent information to reduce the amount of recycled text in their manuscript to address editor concerns. Superficial changes such as these can impact the overall quality of the author’s work, the text may become less engaging and harder to understand, particularly if text was removed. In fact, TRRP argues that text recycling may be a more ethical option than superficial or cosmetic rewording, since the purpose of reworking recycled language is to conceal the reused text from the reader. Additionally, text recycling may be preferable since using consistent language in documents/publications regarding an author’s area of research ensures accuracy and broadens understanding of the work.