I'm somewhere between the two. I do think that occasionally we need to restate 
something and the way we've wordsmithed it over multiple edits really is the 
best way to say it. 

But, when you might see yourself duplicating a major subsection of an intro or 
method, it is probably better to summarize what you said in the other paper and 
cite so the interested reader who wants those details can go get it there. 

Paul C Bernhardt
Frostburg State University
Frostburg, MD, USA
pcbernhardt[at]frostburg[d0t]edu



On Sep 15, 2010, at 11:53 AM, Annette Taylor wrote:

>  
> 
> I have to disagree with Miguel here... agree with Barbato. I have spent the 
> last decade researching a single paradigm and plan to do so until I retire 
> probably. It has taken me years to phrase some of the basics in the most 
> clear way so that others can understand what I mean. I don't want to have to 
> think of more alternative ways to say some things. I had to really craft the 
> text of the basic ideas carefully because I'm trying to explain some 
> relatively abstract concepts in the most effective way possible for the 
> listener/reader. So to have to redo this in a potentially less effective way 
> to avoid self-plagiarism seems down right silly. They are my words that I 
> worked on, and if they form the foundation of parts of the introduction and 
> methods section then I can't believe it's a problem to reuse them whenever I 
> write about the same topic. In fact, I have tried to just free write the 
> methods section in subsequent papers and found myself repeating myself 
> verbatim without even trying.
>  
> I an left asking myself if we haven't had the pendulum swing too far, once we 
> have to worry about repeating parts of introductory explanations to set the 
> stage for a new study, as being somehow "dishonest" or lacking "integrity."
>  
> Just my 2 cents here. What do the others on the list think?
>  
> Annette
>  
> Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph. D.
> Professor, Psychological Sciences
> University of San Diego
> 5998 Alcala Park
> San Diego, CA 92110
> tay...@sandiego.edu
>  
> From: Rick Froman [rfro...@jbu.edu]
> Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2010 7:58 AM
> To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> Subject: [tips] Self-plagiarism
> 
>  
> 
> http://www.the-scientist.com/blog/display/57676/
>  
> Interesting post on The Scientist.com with quotes from TIPSter (and 
> plagiarism expert) Miguel Roig. (I don’t mean that he is good at it, just 
> that he knows a lot about it.)
>  
> Rick
>  
> Rick Froman
> rfro...@jbu.edu
>  
> 
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