International Journal of Trends in Multidisciplinary
Plagiarism is the act of presenting the work, ideas, data, words or language (or other intellectual property) of others as one’s own without proper attribution or authorization. To maintain the highest standards of research integrity, the journal identifies the following types of prohibited misconduct:
The Journal will judge every case of plagiarism based on its specific limits and context. All manuscripts undergo rigorous initial screening via proprietary/commercial software Turnitin and other industry-standard tools to detect similarities with previously published work.
If plagiarism is detected by an editorial board member, reviewer or editor at any stage of the article process—including before or after acceptance, during editing or at the page proof stage—the Journal will take immediate action based on the following threshold levels (aligned with UGC guidelines):
| Similarity Level | Percentage Range | Editorial Action and Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Level 0 | Up to 5% | Acceptable: Minor similarities; no penalty provided they do not involve core results. The manuscript is assigned a Submission ID and authors are asked for minor content revisions if necessary. |
| Level 1 | Above 5% to 15% | Revision Required: No Submission ID is assigned; manuscript is returned to authors for comprehensive revision before peer review begins and must be resubmitted within a stipulated timeframe. |
| Level 2 | Above 15% to 25% | Rejection & Debarment: The manuscript is rejected and authors are prohibited from submitting to the journal for one year. |
| Level 3 | Above 25% | Severe Sanction: Immediate rejection and a debarment from publishing for a period of six months to a permanent ban. |
1. Plagiarism Before Publication
If plagiarism is detected during any stage of the article process (review, formatting or page proof), it will result in immediate rejection or a mandatory request for revision, strictly according to the severity levels defined in the Plagiarism Threshold table. Reviewers and editors are mandated to report suspected ethical breaches immediately.
2. Plagiarism After Publication
If plagiarism is discovered after an article has been published, the journal will conduct a formal investigation. If misconduct is proven, the journal will issue a formal retraction or publish an erratum in accordance with COPE Retraction Guidelines to maintain the integrity of the scholarly record.
Author Responsibilities: