All manuscripts submitted to the Archives of Plastic Surgery are run through CrossCheck using the software powered by iThenticate to compare their
similarity with previously published papers [1]. The editors use the results of this comparison for reference in manuscript screening.
The results include the similarity index, which represents the overall similarity
of a submitted manuscript to previously published papers.
The author analyzed the similarity index of the manuscripts submitted to the Archives of Plastic Surgery for two years from the year 2012 to 2013, a total of 440 manuscripts: 289 manuscripts
in 2012 and 151 manuscripts in 2013. The overall similarity index of 2013 fell from
2012 ([Fig. 1]). Although this decrease was not statistically significant, we assume the reason
for the decrease was the introduction of the use of CrossCheck for authors. The similarity
index of the manuscripts that were accepted was lower than that of the manuscripts
that were not accepted (P=0.046) ([Fig. 2]). This implies that manuscripts accepted for publication are likely to be of better
quality. The similarity index of papers submitted from English-dominant countries
was lower than that for authors from countries that primarily speak another language
(P=0.016) ([Fig. 3]). This may imply that a language barrier plays a role in limiting the quality of
papers. The similarity index of the original articles and image articles was higher
than those of the other categories of articles, but the difference was not statistically
significant (P=0.190) ([Fig. 4]). Among the original articles, the experimental papers had a higher similarity index
than the clinical papers (P=0.001) ([Fig. 5]). Similar experimental methods among experimental papers may have led to such results,
even for papers with legitimately original content.
Fig. 1 Comparison of the similarity index between 2012 and 2013
Fig. 2 Comparison of the similarity index between accepted and rejected papers
Fig. 3 Comparison of the similarity index between English- and non-English-language countries
Fig. 4 Analysis of the similarity index by publication type
Fig. 5
Comparison of the similarity index between clinical and experimental papers
Although we cannot jump to the conclusion that higher similarity index manuscripts
are necessarily 'low-grade' manuscripts, higher similarity may imply that an article
is a patchwork paper composed of sentences copied from other articles [2]. This is problematic even if the research methodology, data, and analysis are sound
because the papers with a high similarity index may represent the lack of effort to
write an original text. Since the statistical significance of the relationship between
the acceptance of a manuscript and a low similarity index has been demonstrated, we
must take action. This author recommends that papers submitted to the Archives of Plastic Surgery with a similarity index of over 40% be sent back to the authors to be rewritten.
However, among the types of articles, experimental papers should be judged with greater
flexibility due to their characteristic feature of high similarity. Authors who wish
to submit a paper to this journal would be well served to use their own words and
sentences in writing in order to ensure that they effectively communicate the quality
and originality of their research.