Misconduct and Plagiarism
Misconduct and Plagiarism
Perception, Navigation and Intelligent Devices takes research misconduct and publication malpractice seriously. The journal may investigate suspected misconduct before or after publication.
Research Misconduct
Research misconduct includes fabrication, falsification, plagiarism, image manipulation, data manipulation, inappropriate authorship, duplicate submission, duplicate publication, citation manipulation, manipulated experiments, and failure to disclose conflicts of interest.
Plagiarism
Plagiarism includes using another person's words, ideas, figures, data, algorithms, software, sensor configurations, device designs, robotic frameworks, navigation methods, diagrams, or work without proper acknowledgement. It also includes excessive reuse of an author's own previously published work without appropriate citation.
Prototype and Experimental Misrepresentation
Misrepresentation includes presenting untested systems as validated, hiding material limitations, misreporting experiments, fabricating sensor data, manipulating navigation results, or claiming originality for reused tools, datasets, prototypes, frameworks, or platforms.
Investigation
If misconduct is suspected, the editorial office may request clarification from the authors, consult reviewers or editors, check documentation, and take appropriate action according to the seriousness of the concern.
Possible Actions
Possible actions include request for correction, rejection, withdrawal, publication of a correction, expression of concern, retraction, or notification to relevant institutions where necessary.
Author Cooperation
Authors are expected to cooperate with any investigation and provide original data, experiment details, prototype documentation, code details, ethical approvals, permissions, or explanations when requested.