Should I cite myself in my PhD proposal?












1















I am writing a research proposal for a PhD, and I am referring to my earlier research, which is published in a scientific journal. Should I cite myself? It feels a little preposterous, but I can imagine it could be good to provide the full reference. I do provide it in my CV as well.
An additional reason I thought it would be good to cite my paper is because I am making the claim that it built on the work of a professor from the department I am applying to, and I figured providing a reference - with DOI - to my paper would be the best way to back that claim up.



Thank you in advance for the advice, I really appreciate it.










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    I am writing a research proposal for a PhD, and I am referring to my earlier research, which is published in a scientific journal. Should I cite myself? It feels a little preposterous, but I can imagine it could be good to provide the full reference. I do provide it in my CV as well.
    An additional reason I thought it would be good to cite my paper is because I am making the claim that it built on the work of a professor from the department I am applying to, and I figured providing a reference - with DOI - to my paper would be the best way to back that claim up.



    Thank you in advance for the advice, I really appreciate it.










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




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      I am writing a research proposal for a PhD, and I am referring to my earlier research, which is published in a scientific journal. Should I cite myself? It feels a little preposterous, but I can imagine it could be good to provide the full reference. I do provide it in my CV as well.
      An additional reason I thought it would be good to cite my paper is because I am making the claim that it built on the work of a professor from the department I am applying to, and I figured providing a reference - with DOI - to my paper would be the best way to back that claim up.



      Thank you in advance for the advice, I really appreciate it.










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I am writing a research proposal for a PhD, and I am referring to my earlier research, which is published in a scientific journal. Should I cite myself? It feels a little preposterous, but I can imagine it could be good to provide the full reference. I do provide it in my CV as well.
      An additional reason I thought it would be good to cite my paper is because I am making the claim that it built on the work of a professor from the department I am applying to, and I figured providing a reference - with DOI - to my paper would be the best way to back that claim up.



      Thank you in advance for the advice, I really appreciate it.







      phd citations research-proposal






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      edited 2 hours ago









      Ben

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      asked 5 hours ago









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          Yes, you should cite all relevant research: When conducting research projects that extend over multiple papers it is not unusual to want to refer to your past published papers on the topic. These should be treated just as with other relevant literature ---i.e., if they are relevant then they should be cited properly.






          share|improve this answer































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            In general you cite yourself just as you would any other person. Failing to do so, while repeating earlier things you have published, leads to a charge of self-plagiarism. It is an odd concept, but is treated seriously.



            Ordinary plagiarism is when you claim the work of another as your own. Self plagiarism is a bit different, of course.



            But both types of plagiarism have the purpose of placing a work of scholarship within its complete context. People reading a new paper want to know what it is based on, whether by that author or another. Having the citation lets a reader go back to that context (and possible further citations).



            So, while this isn't an actual publication you are developing, the same rules should apply. The reader wants/needs the context.






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              1














              Yeah sure. You self-cite from paper to paper also. And for grant proposals.






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                3 Answers
                3






                active

                oldest

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                3 Answers
                3






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                5














                Yes, you should cite all relevant research: When conducting research projects that extend over multiple papers it is not unusual to want to refer to your past published papers on the topic. These should be treated just as with other relevant literature ---i.e., if they are relevant then they should be cited properly.






                share|improve this answer




























                  5














                  Yes, you should cite all relevant research: When conducting research projects that extend over multiple papers it is not unusual to want to refer to your past published papers on the topic. These should be treated just as with other relevant literature ---i.e., if they are relevant then they should be cited properly.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    5












                    5








                    5







                    Yes, you should cite all relevant research: When conducting research projects that extend over multiple papers it is not unusual to want to refer to your past published papers on the topic. These should be treated just as with other relevant literature ---i.e., if they are relevant then they should be cited properly.






                    share|improve this answer













                    Yes, you should cite all relevant research: When conducting research projects that extend over multiple papers it is not unusual to want to refer to your past published papers on the topic. These should be treated just as with other relevant literature ---i.e., if they are relevant then they should be cited properly.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 2 hours ago









                    BenBen

                    12.5k33057




                    12.5k33057























                        2














                        In general you cite yourself just as you would any other person. Failing to do so, while repeating earlier things you have published, leads to a charge of self-plagiarism. It is an odd concept, but is treated seriously.



                        Ordinary plagiarism is when you claim the work of another as your own. Self plagiarism is a bit different, of course.



                        But both types of plagiarism have the purpose of placing a work of scholarship within its complete context. People reading a new paper want to know what it is based on, whether by that author or another. Having the citation lets a reader go back to that context (and possible further citations).



                        So, while this isn't an actual publication you are developing, the same rules should apply. The reader wants/needs the context.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          2














                          In general you cite yourself just as you would any other person. Failing to do so, while repeating earlier things you have published, leads to a charge of self-plagiarism. It is an odd concept, but is treated seriously.



                          Ordinary plagiarism is when you claim the work of another as your own. Self plagiarism is a bit different, of course.



                          But both types of plagiarism have the purpose of placing a work of scholarship within its complete context. People reading a new paper want to know what it is based on, whether by that author or another. Having the citation lets a reader go back to that context (and possible further citations).



                          So, while this isn't an actual publication you are developing, the same rules should apply. The reader wants/needs the context.






                          share|improve this answer


























                            2












                            2








                            2







                            In general you cite yourself just as you would any other person. Failing to do so, while repeating earlier things you have published, leads to a charge of self-plagiarism. It is an odd concept, but is treated seriously.



                            Ordinary plagiarism is when you claim the work of another as your own. Self plagiarism is a bit different, of course.



                            But both types of plagiarism have the purpose of placing a work of scholarship within its complete context. People reading a new paper want to know what it is based on, whether by that author or another. Having the citation lets a reader go back to that context (and possible further citations).



                            So, while this isn't an actual publication you are developing, the same rules should apply. The reader wants/needs the context.






                            share|improve this answer













                            In general you cite yourself just as you would any other person. Failing to do so, while repeating earlier things you have published, leads to a charge of self-plagiarism. It is an odd concept, but is treated seriously.



                            Ordinary plagiarism is when you claim the work of another as your own. Self plagiarism is a bit different, of course.



                            But both types of plagiarism have the purpose of placing a work of scholarship within its complete context. People reading a new paper want to know what it is based on, whether by that author or another. Having the citation lets a reader go back to that context (and possible further citations).



                            So, while this isn't an actual publication you are developing, the same rules should apply. The reader wants/needs the context.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 3 hours ago









                            BuffyBuffy

                            41.1k9133211




                            41.1k9133211























                                1














                                Yeah sure. You self-cite from paper to paper also. And for grant proposals.






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                                  Yeah sure. You self-cite from paper to paper also. And for grant proposals.






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                                    1












                                    1








                                    1







                                    Yeah sure. You self-cite from paper to paper also. And for grant proposals.






                                    share|improve this answer








                                    New contributor




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                                    Yeah sure. You self-cite from paper to paper also. And for grant proposals.







                                    share|improve this answer








                                    New contributor




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                                    answered 3 hours ago









                                    guestguest

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