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copyright,
hours,
informationists,
interlibrary loan,
librarians,
orientations,
publishing,
RefWorks,
researching,
residency,
specialty guides,
writing
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Understanding your rights as an author, reviewing your research’s impact, and tracking your publications is part of maintaining your scholarly identity. Such maintenance boosts the discoverability of your work even before it goes to press.
Copyright
Open Access (OA): Without subscription fees limiting access to scholarly literature, people can "read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles". Scientists without a budget for subscriptions …
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copyright,
data,
informationists,
librarians,
literature searches,
medical education,
orientations,
publishing,
researching,
specialty guides,
writing
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Are you planning or working on a project that could benefit from any of the AI tools that assist with tasks like summarizing the literature, extracting data from literature, and synthesizing findings? Such tools can save time and perhaps improve how you identify connections in the literature for your project. Yet, there are issues to consider. To summarize or analyze literature, an artificial intelligence tool will prompt you to upload content, such as journal articles or book excerpts. This see…
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Using someone else’s work might involve getting permission from the copyright holder, and even paying a fee. Copyright protects creators from theft and allows them to profit when others use their content.
Articles
Can I use an article in my paper?
Theories and words from an article can be properly cited from the original work freely. However, if you want to reproduce a figure, diagram, or image from the article in your work, you must get permission from the copyright holder. The d…
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Copyright is a murky area of law. It provides protection for content creators from having their work stolen and allows them to profit off the use of their content. To use a copyrighted work, you must get permission from the copyright holder and may have to pay a fee.
You can use images, charts, and tables in the classroom- when you obtain them from the library’s resources. The copyright fee that you would normally have to pay is included in our subscriptions. …
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