How to Interpret Plagiarism Reports ?
How to Interpret Plagiarism Reports How to Interpret Plagiarism Reports Plagiarism reports generated by tools such as Turnitin, iThenticate, or Grammarly show similarity between a submitted document and existing sources. However, a high similarity score does not always mean plagiarism. Understanding how to read and interpret a plagiarism report is essential for students, researchers, and academicians. 1. What Is a Similarity Index? The similarity index is the percentage of text that matches existing sources. It represents overlap, not automatically plagiarism. 0–10%: Very low similarity (generally acceptable) 10–20%: Low similarity (check for minor issues) 20–30%: Moderate similarity (needs review) Above 30%: High similarity (likely plagiarism if not justified) Different universities set different acceptable limits based on policy. 2. Understanding Matched Sources Plagiarism reports list the sources from which text matches were found. These may ...