All Imperium Research Institute journals have the same policy regarding corrections and retractions. We differentiate between addenda, errata, corrigenda, and retractions.
Addenda:
Suppose authors from the original publication should have included significant information. In that case, the original article can be amended through an addendum reporting these previously omitted results. The addendum will be published in the journal’s current issue, with page numbers added. A hyperlink to the addendum will also be added to the original publication.
Errata:
An erratum will be used if a significant error has been introduced during the production of the journal article, including errors of omission, such as the failure to make factual proof corrections requested by authors within the deadline provided by the journal and within journal policy. A significant error is considered to affect the scholarly record, the scientific integrity of the article, the author’s reputation, or the journal’s. All errata are linked to the version of the article that they correct.
Corrigenda:
A corrigendum is a notification of a significant error made by the article’s authors. The editors approve all corrigenda of the journal. All corrigenda are linked to the version of the article that they correct.
Retractions:
An editor will issue a retraction upon several conditions: severe plagiarism, multiple publications, data fabrication, unreliable or faulty findings, and other harmful practices. In this case, a retraction notice will be published. This notice will include the title and authors of the article, the reason for the retraction, and who is retracting the article. It will be published online with a link to the online version of the article. It will be published in the next print issue and included in the table of contents. Before publishing the notice of retraction, the authors should send a signed statement to the editorial office.