The following questions review the online module on citations and avoiding plagiarism.

1.       Why is it not recommendable to leave the citation at the end of the paragraph when the whole paragraph is referring to one source?  What would be a better solution?

 2.       Is it acceptable to see the same source marked several times in consecutive sentences within a paragraph? 

 3.       It is quite common for writers to overuse the words “according to X”. What other solutions are there when you want to mention some other author’s view?

 4.       The online module mentioned author-prominent and information-prominent citations. What is the difference? Had you heard about this distinction before?  Have you seen both used in articles from your field?

 5.       What is the difference between paraphrasing, quoting and summarizing?

 6.       Here is an excerpt from an abstract for an article published in an ACM journal.

The adoption of the Internet of Things is gradually increasing. However, there remains a significant obstacle that hinders its adoption as a truly ubiquitous technology: the ability of constrained devices to unambiguously exchange data with shared meaning. In this respect, the World Wide Web Consortium has developed the Web of Things architecture to provide semantic data exchange. However, such an architecture does not cover all possible use cases and still has important limitations.

References

[1] O. Novo and M. Di Francesco, “Semantic Interoperability in the IoT: Extending the Web of Things Architecture,” ACM Trans. Internet Things, vol. 1, no. 1, Mar. 2020. https://doi.org/10.1145/3375838

Your friend Pekka is writing a paper and has asked your opinion on how to use citations. Based on reading the above article and a few others, Pekka has written the following sentence for which he needs to add the citation(s): 

[…] = The interoperability of the Internet of Things devices still needs much development to ensure robust data exchange.

Which of the following forms are suitable in the IEEE citation style? Why some of them are not good style?

a.       According to [1], [...].

b.       Authors in [1] argue that [...].

c.       Novo and Di Francesco [4] argue that [...].

d.       [1] state that [...].

e.       [...] [1].

f.        Many studies have reported that [...] [1],[3],[7].

 

7.       What different citation styles are you aware of now?  Discuss their broad differences. Which style are you planning on using for this course?


Last modified: Thursday, 28 April 2022, 11:54 AM