Q5. Information provided in a work must be cited and referenced in all the following
cases except
1) When the information comes froma newspaper article
2)When it is a common
knowledge
3)When the work or idea is different from what is commonly used in your discipline
4)When an information was drawn out from a conference proceedings
which is the correct option
Answers
Answered by
5
Answer:
4)When an information was drawn out from a conference proceedings
Answered by
0
Answer:
Option 4 - When information was drawn out from conference proceedings is the correct answer.
Explanation:
- Quotations, opinions, and predictions, whether explicitly quoted or paraphrased, must always be cited, whether they are found on the web or in print.
- The statistics.
- The original visuals are included.
- Theories proposed by another author.
- Case studies.
- Direct experimental methods or outcomes of another author.
- Specialized research processes or discoveries of another author.
- If you use particular information of the type just indicated, make sure you document it; otherwise, you can be accused of plagiarism.
- It's better to be safe than to be lazy.
- Instead of asking your reader to believe your memory or what appears to be your notion, you might point to an authority by citing the source of your knowledge.
- Even if you recollect a number or a process description, citing such information—especially if it originated straight from a source—gives your work greater credibility and emphasises the correctness, timeliness, and even potential bias of your data.
- In a nutshell, be trustworthy, wise, and cautious.
Hence, when the information was drawn out from conference proceedings it need not be cited.
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