Plagiarism is the wrongful appropriation and stealing the work of another author's: language, opinions, concepts, or terminologies and representing them as one's own original work.
The ensuing kinds of plagiarism are considered:
Self-Plagiarism: When an author reuses whole or portions of their pre-published research, then it is identified as self-plagiarism. Complete self-plagiarism is a case when an author republishes their own formerly published work in a new Journal.
Partial Plagiarism: If content is a combination from several different sources, where the author has widely rearticulated text, then it is identified as partial plagiarism.
Full Plagiarism: Formerly published content deprived of any changes to the text, idea and grammar is considered as full plagiarism. It encompasses presenting particular text from a source as one’s own work.
Plagiarism Check: All the manuscripts submitted for publication are cross-checked for plagiarism before the review process.
Our Journal will pass judgment on any instance of plagiarism on its points of confinement. If plagiarism is noticed by the Editorial Board Committee, Review Committee, etc., in any Phase of article process- before or after acknowledgement, during the review or at a proof work stage. We will intimate the same to the author(s) and will request them for the revised content or to cite the references from where the content has been taken.
0- 30% Plagiarism: The manuscript will be given a Unique ID and proceeds further into the review process.
>30% Plagiarism: The submitted manuscript will be rejected without the review process. The authors are recommended to resubmit the revised the manuscript.
Our Journal doesn't permit any type of Plagiarism and pre-published submissions. Henceforth, we emphatically recommend our authors to exhaustive check of the article content before submitting it to our Journals for publication. We request our Authors to utilize "Online Plagiarism Checking software’s" to check for the plagiarism prior to submission in the initial phase, though they are not totally consistent.