Monday, 16 October 2017

publications - Is it okay to incorporate a block of citations from a review paper into my own paper?


I'm currently writing a paper on a certain topic for which a review article was recently published. Of course, I want to contrast my new approach to existing techniques. For that purpose, I have identified the relevant prior work with the help of the above-mentioned review article.


However, in my current version, I simply reuse the whole block of citations from the review article with no change at all. I have consulted each reference individually and they do seem appropriate for citation.




  • Is taking a pre-existing block of citations and using it in my own manuscript considered plagiarism?



Answer



You must cite your source every time you use someone else's intellectual contributions.


A review article contributes curation of sources (among other things) as its intellectual content. If you use that intellectual content, you must cite the review paper (in addition to the individual sources). Otherwise you are misleading the reader into believing that you've done all that work (reading very broadly in the literature, identifying the most relevant and useful sources) yourself.


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