Research and Publication Ethics
The Journal adopts and adheres to the ethical guidelines, frameworks and standards established by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
Ethical Responsibilities of Authors
- Original Content: The Journal only publishes original scholar work. Manuscripts submitted to the Journal must not be published or under consideration for publication. However, authors can submit their manuscript to the Journal upon receiving the rejection letter from another publisher. Theses and dissertations that are not archived online are considered original and unpublished. However, authors submitting a manuscript using the content and data of theses or dissertations must declare it in the Acknowledgement section.
- Authorship: Authors must follow the authorship criteria listed in “Authorship” section and avoid gift or ghost authorship.
- Redundant Publication: Authors must avoid submitting a manuscript for publication based on the same data set, study or experiment. Redundant publications are considered unethical.
- Citations and Plagiarism: Authors must cite relevant and verified literature to support their scholarly work. For more information about citation, also see (References Section)
- Authors must avoid any kind of citation manipulations and misconduct when citing other scholarly work, and also avoid plagiarism and self-plagiarism.
- Fabrication and Falsification: Authors must avoid data fabrication and falsification of any content. Authors obliged to ensure that data presented in their manuscript is accurate and representative of the manuscript. Authors may be asked to submit their raw data or supplemental data with the manuscript to ensure the transparency. Authors are responsible from submitting supplementary and ancillary material
- Ethics committee approval: Research requiring ethics committee approval must have ethics committee approval and submit its notification in the method section and at the end of the article. This notification must include the university, date and number from which ethics committee approval was obtained.
- Conflict of Interests: Authors must declare competing interest. There may be a conflict of interest when you (or your employer, sponsor, or family/friends) have a financial, commercial, legal, or professional connection with other organizations or those working with them that could impact the research or the way the results are interpreted. Therefore, authors have to declare financial, commercial, legal or, professional competing interests in their cover letter. If there is no conflict of interest, authors also must declare it in their manuscript.
- Authors are required to notify the journal editor or publisher of any inaccuracy or error in a published, preprint, or under-review manuscript and to cooperate with the editor in correcting or withdrawing the manuscript.
Ethical Responsibilities of Editors and Reviewers
Editors and peer reviewers are obliged to
- follow the COPE’s Code of Conduct and Best Practice Guidelines for Journal Editors.
- keep manuscripts and editorial reports confidential. Manuscripts, editorial reports and any information obtained cannot be shared or disclosed for any reasons.
- keep their anonymity, refraining from disclosing their identity to authors or other editors and reviewers. (Reviewers cannot not contact the authors directly without the permission of the journal.)
- declare all the competing interest (personal, financial, intellectual, professional, political or religious), seek advice from the editorial office or disagree to review in case of any competing interests.
- keep an open and constructive communication with authors, and other editors and peer-reviewers. (Inappropriate language or disruptive behaviour is not acceptable. Journal follows COPE guidelines when dealing with such cases.
- complete the tasks that are assigned tasks on a timely manner, inform the journal in case of a need for an extension or a withdrawal from the task.
- facilitate the review process, remain unbiased, ensure the review process proceed consistent and fair.
- protect the integrity of the peer-review process.
- inform the editorial office if come across any misconduct, unethical behaviour, or irregularities with respect to research and publication ethics.
Retractions
Journal of Trends in Medical Investigation will initiate a retraction process for articles found to have ethical violations such as multiple submissions, false authorship, plagiarism, or fabrication of data. As part of its ethical policy, Northwestern Medical Journal adheres to the guidelines and recommendations set forth by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
- For more information, please see COPE Retraction Guidelines: https://publicationethics.org