Publication Ethics

This Conference follows the guidelines set out by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) in all aspects of publication ethics, in particular, protocols of research and publication misconduct.

Maintaining Research Results

The results of research should be recorded and maintained in a form that allows analysis and review, both by collaborators before publication and by other scientists for a reasonable period after publication. Exceptions may be appropriate in certain circumstances to preserve privacy, to assure patent protection, or for similar reasons.

Fabrication of data is an egregious departure from the expected norms of scientific conduct, as is the selective reporting of data with the intent to mislead or deceive, as well as the theft of data or research results from others.

Publication and Authorship

Authors have the responsibility to provide an accurate and concise account of their research, including its significance. Sufficient detail and references to public sources should be included for reproducibility. Proper acknowledgment of others' work is essential, with citations to influential publications. Private information obtained from conversations or correspondence requires explicit permission from the source. Information from confidential services cannot be used without permission from the author. Authors must obtain permission and include credit lines for previously published materials. Authors deriving a journal article from proceedings must obtain copyright permission if reusing figures/tables and cite the proceedings paper.

Author Obligations