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Writing Guide

Academic Misconduct and Plagarism

UT Southwestern Handbook of Institutional Polices and Operating Procedures

ETH-103 STANDARDS OF CONDUCT, Chapter 3:  Ethics, Compliance and Standards of Behavior

The Standards of Conduct Guide applies to all members of the UT Southwestern community, including – but not limited to – employees, faculty, students, trainees, vendors, contractors, volunteers, committees, and organizations.

EDU-151 STUDENT CONDUCT AND DISCIPLINE, Chapter 10:  Students, Postdoctoral Scholars, Residents and Fellows

PROHIBITED CONDUCT

1. Scholastic Dishonesty

Any student who commits an act of scholastic dishonesty is subject to discipline. Scholastic dishonesty means any act designed or intended to give an unfair advantage to a student, regardless of whether an unfair advantage is actually gained. Examples of scholastic dishonesty include but are not limited to cheating, plagiarism, collusion, submitting work or materials that are attributable in whole or in part to another person, taking an examination for another person, or violation of exam instructions or exam security procedures. Scholastic dishonesty also includes the attempt to commit such acts, whether or not the attempt is successful.

AI and Plagiarism - Select Articles

AI and Plagiarism – Select Articles

Note: Due to the rapidly evolving nature or AI/Generative Artificial Intelligence, to view the most current literature in PubMed or Scopus, see AI Search String. You can cut and paste the search strategy into PubMed or Scopus (use the "Article Title" dropdown in the Basic Search mode) and combine with additional search terms.

For pre-print, see Preprint Databases:

Search terms will vary based on your topic of interest. The following suggestions are to be used as a starting point:

  • plagiarism
  • plagiarize