Research Ethics
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Commitment to high academic and professional standards in all stages of the research, from submitting the research proposal to conducting the research, collecting and saving data, analyzing it, discussing the results, and publishing it without distortion, selectivity, or omission. Researchers should also avoid splitting the results collected in a single study into several manuscripts, republishing the same research with modifications, or extracting parts of a doctoral or master's thesis and presenting them as new research.
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Acknowledge the efforts of all those who participated in the research, including colleagues and students, by including them in the list of authors, as well as acknowledging the sources of material and moral support that were used to conduct the research.
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Attribute any information used in the research to its original source and avoid plagiarism.
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Obtain consent from the Scientific Research Ethics Committee when conducting research on humans, animals, or the environment.
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Obtain written consent from each of the individuals used as subjects of the research after informing them of all the consequences of their participation, and avoid publishing the results of the research in such cases except in the form of a statistical analysis that guarantees the confidentiality of the information collected about these individuals.
Members of the Scientific Research Committee