Citing sources in your academic writing ethically and accurately


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Citing sources in your academic writing ethically and accurately


Why it’s important to cite right 

The other day, I was asked by a friend, who was practicing a one-meal-a-day diet, if I knew of any studies that corroborated the idea of starving for 23 hours straight for good health. I obviously opened Google Scholar to look for any accessible research on the subject.  

When looking for accurate information, scholars and even non-scholars tend to rely on academic papers. Why? Well, because we have faith in the scientific process and we believe that unlike generic articles, academic papers are careful in validating justifications and theories by referencing other sound studies in the field. Your reader could be anyone – another scholar, a healthcare practitioner, a policy maker, an educator or just a common man who could be basing their actions on your paper. 

Via academic papers, researchers, therefore, have the responsibility to not only accurately present the study's results, but to also truthfully discuss the findings of other related studies in the light of their own. Prior studies agreeing with your findings could influence a reader differently than say past research contravening it. Wrong referencing, especially if repeated across generations of writing, could turn inaccurate information into commonly accepted facts. 1 

Your study is obviously based on existing knowledge. It is, as Issac Newton once wrote, "if I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." Any information in your article- be it a hypothesis or an idea or even the methodology your readers will not know where it came from unless you have informed them. Accurate attribution is one of the guiding principles of academic integrity ensuring that credit is given where credit is due and that anyone can trace the genesis of a scientific theory, a conjecture, model or framework. 2 

 

Citing your references – where can you go wrong 

 

  1. Providing wrong or incomplete references. 

This could be an innocent mistake where you unintentionally provide wrong or missing reference information (of author-date-publication-page-version details), which impedes the discovery of the right reference. 3 Of course, you could reduce the probability of such mistakes using reference management software such as EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley, etc. But even then, if you, for instance, get the authors right but the publication year wrong, you could end up inserting the wrong citation. 3 These errors are mostly (but not always) picked in the copy-editing stage with or sometimes without the assistance of an automated reference extraction and checking process.4  

  1. Overlooking a citation 

It could also be that you missed citing a source that is relevant. The source could be another researcher’s article or even your own previously published paper. Or perhaps it is an individual not at all connected with the academics, whom you casually interreacted with, that helped you arrive at an important insight about your work.5 Failing to cite in any of such cases could be considered as plagiarism and it could be categorized under either plagiarism of idea, plagiarism of text, mosaic plagiarism (copying perspectives and opinions along with and a number of verbatim terms or phrases without crediting) or self-plagiarism.6 These could result in penalties ranging from disciplinary actions including apology letters and retraction of the published article to criminal charges such as suspension and prosecution.7  

  1. Associating with peer review and citation rings  

Peer-review rings are coalitions formed between real scientists and pseudonym accounts created with fake e-mail addresses with the intention of rigging the peer review system. Citation rings or citation cartels, on the other hand, are groups of researchers who vow to cite each other’s papers even if they are completely irrelevant. These are usually a network of researchers driven by the need to improve their citation scores. A particularly infamous case is that of “a peer review and citation ring” uncovered by Sage Publications, in 2014, that had been operating in one of their journals. This led to the retraction of 60 implicated articles and the resignation of a researcher who was a key player in the ring.8  

  1. Not checking the validity of sources 

Before you read anything as part of your literature review, it is best if you could crosscheck its credibility. For instance, was the paper published in a peer-reviewed journal? When was it published – is it possible that the data in it could be considered out-of-date now? Has it been retracted since? Have there been any corrections released after its publication? It isn’t just a matter of getting the citation wrong: working with unreliable sources could have major consequences on the foundation of your study as a whole. 

  1. Citing a source that you did not read or understand 

It is always recommended that you read and understand a paper completely before citing it. Getting a citation wrong could lead to a fellow researcher being incorrectly linked to a claim that they do not support in the first place. 9 It is rather easy to copy references from another article on the same topic without actually reading the original paper. But what if that paper had gotten the citation wrong? Careless or wrong referencing could lead to perpetuation of false information and Chinese whispers that defy the very idea of scientific progress. 10  

 

Can ChatGPT help? 

 

ChatGPT (and others such as Bard) can be an extremely helpful tool during your writing journey However, it would be wise to accept its results with a grain of salt. ChatGPT is infamous for its hallucinations – it fabricates information, especially in its references. 11 The reference results it provides you upon your request could look truly authentic. But a careful search of literature for the references will lead you nowhere.12 And if you chose to query it, asking it to summarize the content of a specific paper (instead of reading the entire paper yourself), then know this - it tends to makes up fictitious content than provide you with an actual synopsis. 13 

 

How are reference management tools helpful? 

All research projects begin with an exhaustive literature review. You need to query scholarly databases with terms or keywords related to your study and sift through the endless number of results it throws at you. The process can take weeks or even months. How can you keep track of it all during this process. The answer – reference managers. Tools like EndNote, Zotero and Mendeley help you save the version of paper you read on your PC and gather its metadata including all its bibliographical information. You can further organise all the papers that you collect into folders based on a classification of your choice. And the best part – you can use the tool to auto-insert citations and references into your article based on almost any citation/ reference styles. 

Conclusion 

Citing, especially in academic writing, isn’t a mere formality. It’s a way of crediting those who have paved the path for your work. In today’s digital age, with a plethora of tools at your disposal, reviewing literature and citing sources is easier than ever. Staying informed about citation malpractices can help you overcome the pitfalls of misinformation and academic mistrust and elevate the quality of your work. So be cautious and cite right. 

 

References 

 

1. de Lacey, G., Record, C. & Wade, J. How accurate are quotations and references in medical journals? Br. Med. J. Clin. Res. Ed 291, 884–886 (1985). 

2. Taswell, S. K., Triggle, C., Vayo, J., Dutta, S. & Taswell, C. The hitchhiker’s guide to scholarly research integrity. Proc. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol. 57, e223 (2020). 

3. Rivkin, A. Manuscript Referencing Errors and Their Impact on Shaping Current Evidence. Am. J. Pharm. Educ. 84, ajpe7846 (2020). 

4. Meyer, C. A. Reference Accuracy: Best Practices for Making the Links. J. Electron. Publ. 11, (2008). 

5. Roig, M. Avoiding plagiarism, self-plagiarism, and other questionable writing practices: A guide to ethical writing. U. S. Dep. Health Hum. Serv. Off. Res. Integr. 2015. 

6. Das, N. & Panjabi, M. Plagiarism: Why is it such a big issue for medical writers? Perspect. Clin. Res. 2, 67–71 (2011). 

7. Kumar, P. M., Priya, N. S., Musalaiah, S. & Nagasree, M. Knowing and Avoiding Plagiarism During Scientific Writing. Ann. Med. Health Sci. Res. 4, S193–S198 (2014). 

8. SAGE statement on Journal of Vibration and Control. SAGE Publications Ltd https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/press/sage-statement-on-journal-of-vibration-and-control (2014). 

9. van de Weert, M. & Stella, L. The dangers of citing papers you did not read or understand. J. Mol. Struct. 1186, 102–103 (2019). 

10. Harzing, A.-W. Are our referencing errors undermining our scholarship and credibility? The case of expatriate failure rates. J. Organ. Behav. 23, 127–148 (2002). 

11. Athaluri, S. A. et al. Exploring the Boundaries of Reality: Investigating the Phenomenon of Artificial Intelligence Hallucination in Scientific Writing Through ChatGPT References. Cureus (2023) doi:10.7759/cureus.37432. 

12. Gravel, J., D’Amours-Gravel, M. & Osmanlliu, E. Learning to Fake It: Limited Responses and Fabricated References Provided by ChatGPT for Medical Questions. Mayo Clin. Proc. Digit. Health 1, 226–234 (2023). 

13. Emsley, R. ChatGPT: these are not hallucinations – they’re fabrications and falsifications. Schizophrenia 9, 1–2 (2023). 

 

 

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Published on: Sep 07, 2023

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