Timeline for is this plagiarising an economic model
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
8 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Feb 6 at 19:47 | comment | added | Ray | Plagiarism doesn't care about how you use a model. It cares about whether you take credit for work someone else did. You could copy every aspect of their work perfectly, and it wouldn't be plagiarism as long as you gave them full credit. (It wouldn't be accepted as a thesis, since you didn't do anything, but it wouldn't be plagiarism.) | |
Feb 6 at 6:58 | history | became hot network question | |||
Feb 5 at 19:45 | comment | added | Chris_abc | "I am not extending their work, if anything I am simplifying it to suit my own needs." It sounds like you are applying their work to a problem that allows for a simplification of the model. If that is the case, this is absolutely a (possibly valuable) extension of their work and is perfectly fine. | |
Feb 5 at 19:08 | answer | added | Ethan Bolker | timeline score: 32 | |
Feb 5 at 18:10 | history | edited | Emma Tolhurst |
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Feb 5 at 18:09 | history | edited | Emma Tolhurst | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
added 89 characters in body
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S Feb 5 at 18:05 | review | First questions | |||
Feb 5 at 22:30 | |||||
S Feb 5 at 18:05 | history | asked | Emma Tolhurst | CC BY-SA 4.0 |