Dear Trevor,
It has happened to me a few times. A good trick: inform the plagiarists and their rector (university president, dean, etc.) at the same time. Then two things can happen:1) the plagiarists are punished; 2) the rector (university president, dean, etc.) writes you a circumvoluted letter with excuses, etc. to cover the thing up. Then you have identified two cheats for the price of one.
There is a lady called Michèle Bergadaa from the University of Geneva (I think) whose occupation in life is to identify, publicize and punish plagiarism in academia. Look her up in Google and contact her.
Bye
Gilbert
Gilbert Laporte, Ph.D., CM, MSRC, Dr.h.c.(Eindhoven), Dr.h.c.(Liège)
CIRRELT, GERAD et Chaire de recherche du Canada en distributique/
CIRRELT, GERAD and Canada Research Chair in Distribution Management
HEC Montréal, 3000, chemin de la Côte-Sainte-Catherine, Montréal, Canada H3T 2A7
Telephone +1-514-343-6143; E-mail: Gilbert.Laporte@cirrelt.ca
Canada Research Chair: http://chairedistributique.hec.ca/en/
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Google Scholar profile: http://scholar.google.ca/citations?user=o4n0KvgAAAAJ&hl=fr&oi=ao
De: "Hale, Trevor Schuyler" thale@mays.tamu.edu À: INFORMS-locationanalysis@connectedcommunity.org, ewgla@euro-online.org Envoyé: Jeudi 2 Mai 2019 19:31:16 Objet: [Ewgla] Location analysis
Location colleagues:
And greetings from my new home in the Mays Business School at Texas A&M!
I am writing to the location communities of SOLA and EWGLA listservs for advice. A location paper of mine has been plagiarized and I’m perplexed about what to do about it.
Here is a passage from my paper in Annals of Operations Research in 2003. Please take special note of the incorrect spellings of both “Evangelista” and “Cavalieri”:
“Location science is an area of analytical study that can arguably (although there does exist some contention) be traced back to Pierre de Fermat, Evagelistica Torricelli (a student of Galileo), and Battista Cavallieri. They, independently, proposed (and some say solved) the basic Euclidean spatial median problem (otherwise known as the Weber problem; a name which only adds to the confusion) early in the seventeenth century.”
Compare that to the passage below from the Introduction (written, so to speak, by the editors, Reza Farahani and Masoud Hekmatafar) of an edited Physica-Verlag Heidelberg book entitled Facility Location: Concepts, Models, Algorithms and Case Studies in 2009:
“Location science is an area of analytical study that can be traced back to Pierre de Fermat, Evagelistica Torricelli (a student of Galileo), and Battista Cavallieri. Each one independently proposed (and some say solved) the basic Euclidean spatial median problem early in the seventeenth century.”
And there are other sentences, passages, and paragraphs that were stolen from my ANOR paper in the book. This passage was just the most blatant with the same exact two spelling errors.
Indeed, I have run this (and the other passages) by a professor who has expertise on plagiarism and he not only emphatically agreed with me that it is plagiarism…he wanted to use the text above as a prime example in an upcoming paper of his on the topic of what is plagiarism.
Thoughts? Anyone have experience with this?
Cheers,
Trevor
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Trevor Hale `97 Information & Operations Management Department Mays Business School | Texas A&M University 301F Wehner | 4217 TAMU | College Station, TX 77843-4217
thale@mays.tamu.edu | Wikipedia | Scholar | Pearson
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