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‘ Authorship Skills’ Web-Bibliography

‘ Authorship Skills’ Web-Bibliography. Overview. Contains annotated links to WWW based/ full-text information on how to: Conduct ethical research Write a scientific paper Write a structured abstract Prepare manuscripts for submission Write footnotes and bibliographies Avoid plagiarism

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‘ Authorship Skills’ Web-Bibliography

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  1. ‘Authorship Skills’ Web-Bibliography

  2. Overview • Contains annotated links to WWW based/ full-text information on how to: • Conduct ethical research • Write a scientific paper • Write a structured abstract • Prepare manuscripts for submission • Write footnotes and bibliographies • Avoid plagiarism • Links last checked – 04 2010

  3. Acadia University: ‘You Quote it, you note it!’ • Site is a 10 minute tutorial that covers the principal components of plagiarism • Contains a series of graphical slides and examples geared toward what a student needs to know • Includes yes/no questions that the participant answers • http://library.acadiau.ca/tutorials/plagiarism/

  4. African Malaria Network Trust: Web-Based Course On Health Research Ethics • A research ethics course that is a joint project between AMANET and the European-Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership • Targeted toward members of ethics committees, researchers and general health personnel in developing countries • Online registration is free and participants must complete five compulsory and two optional modules to obtain a certificate • http://webcourses.amanet-trust.org/

  5. AuthorAID • A global research community that provides resources and training for researchers in developing countries • Supports developing country researchers with: • Documents and presentations on ‘best practices’ in writing and publication • Personal mentoring by researchers and professional editors • A discussion and question forum – on key topics including authoring skills & research and analysis • World wide training sessions • To register, go to https://www.authoraid.info/join_form • http://www.authoraid.info/

  6. Blackwell Publishing: Best Practice Guidelines on Publishing Ethics • Reviews and suggests practices for a series of ethical issues related to scientific publishing: • Authorship acknowledgement • Multiple publications • Conflict of interest • Acknowledgement of funding sources • Image manipulation guidelines • Online submission of supplemental data (datasets, videos) • Submission of clinical trials to Central Registry (health sciences) • Institutional review board approval (health sciences) • http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/Publicationethics/

  7. BMJ: Resources for Authors • Full-text resources providing tools for authors • Topics range from how to submit an article for publication to a discussion of the publication process itself, including the peer review process, editorial policies and the BMJ style • Resources are geared toward one publisher’s journals • Information is relevant for the submission of papers to numerous Scientific/Technical/Medical journals • http://resources.bmj.com/bmj/authors

  8. ‘Citing and Referencing: How to Acknowledge Your Sources’ • A tutorial about proper referencing for research papers • Topics covered include plagiarism, terminology, style(s), electronic resources, citation composition and reference lists/bibliographies • Much of the material is relevant to biomedical research including examples from the APA, Harvard, and Vancouver styles • Developed by Monash University, Australia • http://www.lib.monash.edu.au/tutorials/citing/

  9. Citing Bibliographic and Electronic Resources • Contains links to several sites on: • research and documentation online • Vancouver format • APA format • MLA format • Maintained by the Library Resource Center, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii/Manoa • http://www.hawaii.edu/hslib/subjguides/vresources.html#sgvrcitbib (see Virtual Reference Tools contents at top of page)

  10. Council of Science Editors: Ethics and Editorial Policies • Covers a number of relevant topics including promoting integrity in research, organizational policies and editorial practices • Free access to ‘CSE's White Paper on Promoting Integrity in Scientific Journal Publications’ • Useful for editors and prospective authors • http://www.councilscienceeditors.org/editorial_policies/policies.cfm

  11. DePauw University: Avoiding Plagiarism • Guide defines and describes plagiarism and contains ‘general guidelines’: • Words you need to know • Types of plagiarism • Why students plagiarize • Case study • Ways to avoid plagiarism • Plagiarism and the Web • http://www.depauw.edu/admin/arc/w-center/plag.asp

  12. Duke University Libraries: Citing Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism • Overview of use of proper citations and how to avoid plagiarism • ‘Plagiarism Awareness’ section covers warning signs, what to cite and how to cite • Also includes Universities’ policies • http://library.duke.edu/research/plagiarism/

  13. Duke University: Writing Studio • Contains a series of useful ‘resources’: • Academic writing • ESL (English as a Second Language) resources • Working with sources • Genres of writing including abstract, annotated bibiliography, literature review, research and grant proposal and scientific writing • Writing for specific resources including science • Grammar and reference • http://uwp.duke.edu/wstudio/resources/index.html

  14. EndNoteWeb • Is available for Band 1 HINARI institutions from the ‘Reference Sources’ drop down menu • Is a commercial reference management software package, used to manage bibliographies and references when writing essays and articles • Users can add references to a 'library' manually or via importing or exporting via the program • You must login to HINARI to have access to this resource

  15. Elsevier’s Guide to Publication • Links to a series of documents to foster publication with the largest scientific and biomedical publisher • Includes how to edit a manuscript and draft a cover letter, a submission checklist and links to a guide to authors for individual publishers • Contains guides for one publisher • Information is relevant for the submission of papers to numerous Scientific/Technical/Medical journals • http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/authorsview.authors/howtosubmitpaper

  16. Exemplar: words in context • Tool lets you see how a particular term or phrase is used in peer-reviewed, published literature • Specific terms (e.g. developing countries) are typed into a keyword search box • Searches can be limited by keyword subject or journal title • Displayed results are examples of how the term is used in specific journal articles • While the website gives you ‘examples’, you are not able to access the full-text journal articles from the links • Tool has been developed by Springer Publishing • http://qa.exemplar.cmgsites.com/

  17. FAHAMU: Writing for Science and Effective Writing – Core Skills • Basic overview of writing for science and skills for effective writing • Includes how to develop a concept, organize ideas, prepare an outline and write and edit a draft • Maintained by FAHAMU, a network for social justice based in the UK • http://www.fahamu.org/WFCEng/sitemap.html

  18. Forum for African Medical Editors (FAME) • The professional association and network for 15 African-based publishers • Contains several useful tools including guidelines for reviewers and editorial procedures • Would assist authors in preparing manuscripts for submission • FAME’s activities are supported by WHO/TDR and INASP • http://www.who.int/tdr/svc/resources/partnerships-networks/fame-guidelines

  19. Global Forum for Health Research • Aims to improve the allocation of research funds and facilitates collaboration among partners, both in the public and private sectors • Contains the ‘10/90 Report’ (an estimated 10% of global biomedical research funds are used for research into 90% of the world's health problems), the Annual Forum on Health Research, and Communicating Health Research • Includes the ‘Bias Free Framework’ - http://www.globalforumhealth.org/Media-Publications/Publications/The-BIAS-FREE-Framework-A-practical-tool-for-identifying-and-eliminating-social-biases-in-health-research • - a practical tool that provides users with a user-friendly, rights-based tool for identifying and eliminating research biases deriving from social hierarchies • Also contains a valuable ‘Links’ page of organizations with an interest in health research and communication • http://www.globalforumhealth.org/

  20. Health Research Resources • Part of the AED/SatelLife ‘Essential Health Links’ gateway • Contains annotated links to sites that facilitate health research in developing countries • Links include information ranging from the design of health research and a health research web-bibliography, to a guide to international and non-governmental agencies that foster research in this environment • http://www.healthnet.org/essential-links/health-research-resources

  21. Indiana University: How to Recognize Plagiarism • Developed for students at Indiana University but… • Can be used for any non-profit educational purpose; can print and distribute the tutorial • Includes overview, cases, examples, practice and a test plus resources • https://www.indiana.edu/~istd/

  22. Instructions to Authors in the Health Sciences • Links to websites that provide instructions to authors for over 3,500 journals in the health and life sciences • All links are to ‘primary sources’ - to publishers and organizations with editorial responsibilities for the titles • Access is via title/alphabetical listing or subject keyword or journal title searching • Maintained by the Raymond H. Mulford Library, Health Sciences Campus, University of Toledo, U.S. • http://mulford.meduohio.edu/instr/

  23. Office of Research Integrity (ORI) • Sponsored by the U.S. Public Health Service, ORI promotes integrity in biomedical and behavioral research • For 4000 institutions worldwide, the organization monitors investigations of research misconduct • Site contains links to guides and policies on responsible conduct of research • Valuable resource for ethical research • http://ori.dhhs.gov/

  24. SciEdit • A project of the Journal of Young Investigators, SciEdit is a service that: • Proofreads and edits scientific papers before submission to a journal • Contains access to documents on ‘best writing practices’ - http://www.jyi.org/resources/rs.php • Conducts training workshops on scientific writing • http://www.jyi.org/sciedit/

  25. ‘Starting A New Scholarly Journal in Africa’ • Published by the Public Knowledge Project, Vancouver, British Columbia in 2006 • 50 page PDF file; details the benefits and challenges of starting a new scholarly journal in Africa • Contains extensive overview of the types of journals and publication methods and details the process of developing an online, open access journal • Good overview of all the components necessary for publishing a journal • http://pkp.sfu.ca/files/AfricaNewJournal.pdf

  26. ‘The Structured Abstract: An Essential Tool for Research’ • Structured Abstracts often are required for the submission of research proposals, reports and presentations • Key components are: objectives, methods, results and conclusions - which are explained in the site with links to examples and a bibliography • Developed by the Research Section of the Medical Library Association, U.S. • http://research.mlanet.org/structured_abstract.html

  27. Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Writing and Editing for Biomedical Publication • Detailed information on how to write and edit for a biomedical publication • Contains information on the application of the uniform requirements, responsibilities of one or multiple authors, peer review process, ethical issues in research, and privacy and confidentiality of research participants • Also includes a section on preparation of a manuscript • Maintained and regularly updated by the International Committee for Medical Journals and the ‘Uniform Requirements’ have been adopted by many biomedical journals • http://www.icmje.org/

  28. University of California/Davis: Avoiding Plagiarism • A two page summary of plagiarism geared toward students that includes • What is plagiarism? • Why be concerned about plagiarism? • How to cite sources • Guidelines for avoiding plagiarism • Examples • http://sja.ucdavis.edu/files/plagiarism.pdf

  29. University of North Carolina/Chapel Hill: Plagiarism • A handout for students that explains what plagiarism is and outlines steps students can follow to avoid plagiarizing: • What is plagiarism? • What about common knowledge? • What about paraphrasing? • Steps to avoid plagiarism • http://www.unc.edu/depts/wcweb/handouts/plagiarism.html

  30. Virtual Learning Room • A project of the International Food Policy Research Institute • Two free courses: • ‘How to write a convincing proposal’ (how to write a concept note, a convincing proposal for non-technical readers and prepare a logical framework proposal) • ‘How to improve your writing skills’ (how to improve your writing skills, write good research papers, increase your chances of getting a research paper published and make an oral presentation) • http://learning.ifpri.org/

  31. Webgraphy of Health Resources • Guide to information useful on identifying priorities on global health research; getting access to databases and bibliographic resources; formulating research projects and providing links to potential collaborators • Criteria for inclusion in the web-bibliography were the scientific, social and technical relevance of each organization • Each cited source contains an annotation and hypertext link to the specific organization • Produced in 2005 by the Task Group on Building Partnerships, Canadian Coalition for Global Health Research; is a downloadable PDF document. • http://www.ccghr.ca/docs/toolkit/webgraphy_e.pdf

  32. Wiley-Blackwell: Author Services • Documents to assist authors in preparing and submitting publications • Topics include: Find a Journal, Editorial policies, Author Resources (copyright, English language editing, ethics, etc.), Author Rights and Benefits and FAQs • Designed to assist the submission of papers to this publisher • Information is relevant for the submission of papers to numerous Scientific/Technical/Medical journals • http://authorservices.wiley.com/

  33. Writing Center/University of Wisconsin/Madison: Writer’s Handbook • The Writer’s Handbook contains guidelines about: • Stages of writing process • Common types of writing assignments • Grammar and punctuation • Improving your writing skills • Citing references in your paper • While not necessarily geared toward scientific writing, the material is quite useful • http://writing.wisc.edu/Handbook/index.html

  34. Writing/Technical & Scientific • Contains links to several sites on: • citing bibliographic & electronic sources • writing a literature review • Also contains links to sites on: • preparing a poster • presentation skills • tutorials for searching on the Internet • reading/evaluating literature • statistics & epidemiology • Maintained by the Library Resource Center, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii/Manoa • http://www.hawaii.edu/hslib/subjguides/vresources.html (see Virtual Reference Tools contents at top of page)

  35. World Association of Medical Editors • A voluntary association of ~1000 publications fostering cooperation between peer-reviewed medical journals • Site contains discussions of many issues relevant to doing research and publishing in developing countries • Topics include plagiarism, ethical research, peer review, and small and non-English medical journals • http://www.wame.org

  36. Questions/suggestions/comments? • Any additional websites? • hinari@who.int updated 04 2010

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