We discuss two recent plagiarism cases, one you've probably heard about and another that you probably haven't heard about if you're outside Norway. We also chat about the parallels between plagiarism and sports doping—would people reconsider academic dishonesty if they were reminded that future technology may catch them out?
Here are some of the takeaways from the episode (generated with the help of AI):
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Citation
Quintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2024, January 31) "177: Plagiarism", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/4M3F2
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180: Consortium peer reviews
179: Discovery vs. maintenance
178: Alerting researchers about retractions
176: Tracking academic workloads
175: Defending against the scientific dark arts
174: Smug missionaries with test tubes
173: How do science journalists evaluate psychology papers?
172: In defence of the discussion section
171: The easiest person to fool is yourself (with Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris)
170: Holy sheet
169: Using big data to understand behavior (Live episode with Sandra Matz)
168: Meta-meta-science
167: Diluted effect sizes
166: Is science becoming less disruptive over time?
165: Self-promotion
164: The great migration
163: eLife's new peer review model
162: Status bias in peer review
161: The memo (with Brian Nosek)
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