Plagiarism Policy
Plagiarism Policy
Transactions on Smart Electrical and Computational Systems expects all submitted manuscripts to be original and properly referenced. Plagiarism, duplicate publication, inappropriate text reuse, image manipulation, data fabrication, technical misrepresentation, and improper citation practices are not acceptable.
Plagiarism Screening
Manuscripts may be checked for similarity before or during peer review. Similarity reports are used as editorial tools and are interpreted carefully by the editorial team. A high similarity score may lead to revision, clarification, rejection, or further investigation.
Forms of Plagiarism
Plagiarism includes copying text, ideas, figures, tables, algorithms, circuit designs, system models, control methods, data, results, or technical descriptions from another source without proper acknowledgement. It also includes self-plagiarism, duplicate submission, salami publication, and reuse of previously published material without appropriate citation or permission.
Technical Content Reuse
Authors should clearly acknowledge any reused models, datasets, software tools, simulations, circuit designs, diagrams, experimental setups, or technical frameworks. Previously published material must be cited appropriately.
Author Responsibility
Authors are responsible for ensuring that all borrowed content is clearly cited and that permission is obtained where required. Paraphrased material must still be cited.
Editorial Action
If plagiarism or serious similarity concerns are identified, the journal may request an explanation, ask for revision, reject the manuscript, inform the authors' institution, or take post-publication action where necessary.
Post-Publication Cases
If plagiarism is detected after publication, the journal may publish a correction, expression of concern, or retraction depending on the severity of the case.