Overview
Citation integrity verification fails when it stops at plagiarism detection. Running a manuscript through Turnitin catches copied text, but it does not catch citations to retracted papers, citations that misrepresent their sources, or citation patterns that suggest the author did not read the sources they cited. These are the integrity failures that survive plagiarism detection and emerge during peer review.
The Citation Integrity Verification Framework Prompt builds a multi-layer verification process — checking that cited sources have not been retracted, verifying that citations accurately represent their sources, detecting self-plagiarism patterns, and identifying the citation anomalies that trigger reviewer scrutiny.
What you get: - Retraction database verification: how to check all citations against retraction databases - Source-claim alignment verification: the protocol that confirms citations support the claims they are attached to - Self-plagiarism detection: how to identify when the author is citing their own work excessively - Citation pattern analysis: the statistical patterns that indicate the author may not have read the sources - Predatory journal detection: how to identify and remove citations to predatory or questionable sources - Integrity certification checklist: the pre-submission verification that documents citation integrity
Built for: researchers, institutional review boards, and journal editors verifying citation integrity before publication.