Srini Ramakrishnan wrote:

> Nothing surprising there - original Indian academic research even in
> our

Some kind soul has already provided a better translation
http://horadecubitus.blogspot.com/2007/10/translation-of-swedish-article-on.
html

    Article was pure plagiarism

    A scientific article written by five Swedish researchers has been
plagiarised in a respected international journal. "I have never seen
anything like it," says Börje Johansson, professor at the University of
Uppsala and KTH[1] and one of the authors.

    In late August Sergei Simak, lecturer at the University of Linköping,
sat down at his computer and looked up cerium dioxide. A recent article with
an exciting title popped up on his screen and he started to read.

    After only a few sentences, it was clear. The text was identical with
the one he himself, Börje Johansson and three other researchers had written
and published a few years earlier in the respected journal PNAS (Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America).

    "They have replaced the abstract, changed the figures a little and added
a citation to our article - beyond that the content is exactly the same as
in ours," says Börje Johansson.

    The article is about research that might prove useful in the development
of fuel cells - a potentially important energy source in the future.

    "There are perhaps four years of work behind the results presented in
our article."

    The plagiary[2] was published in May in the Journal of Materials
Science, a respected scientific journal. Editor-in-chief Barry Carter writes
in an email to DN that it is one of the most serious cases of plagiarism he
has seen. A retraction will soon be published in the journal. The article is
still published online, but Barry Carter writes further that the publisher,
Springer, are investigation whether and how it can be removed from their
home page[3].

    Barry Carter considers it likely that one or more of the so-called
authors of the plagiary are innocent.

    Tom Mathews, doctor at the Indira Gandhi center for nuclear research in
India and one of the four researchers named as authors, distances himself
from the article in an email to DN. So does Roshan Bokalawela, graduate
student at the University of Oklahoma in the USA.

    DN has not been able to reach the other two authors. One of them claims
in an email to the Swedish researchers that he received a draft from a
researcher in Nepal.

    According to the Swedish regulation[4] on university colleges[5], it is
the duty of the university college since September 1st, 2006 to investigate
all reported cases of suspected scientific cheating.

    Lisa Kvist Wadman

    [1] Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan (Royal Institute of Technology) in
Stockholm

    [2] The Swedish word "plagiat" can mean either the act or the result of
plagiarism; I chose to use "plagiarism" for the former sense, and the
archaic form "plagiary" for the latter.

    [3] sic, I assume they mean "web pages".

    [4] "förordning" equivalent to a federal regulation in the US or a
statutory instrument in the UK

    [5] "högskola", literally "high school", officially translated as
"university college"; an institution that offers education up to a master's
degree or equivalent in a limited range of subjects.


I find it odd that, after two months, Springer is still investigating
whether and how to remove it from their home page. Even if they do not,
surely they can put up a notice that this article was plagiarised.
(arxiv.org has an automatic plagiarism detector. It is high time journals
started doing the same thing.)


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