Predatory Publishing

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Predatory Publishing + present: A GUIDE TO RECOGNIZING AND DEFENDING AGAINST Predatory Publishing IF YOU’RE A RESEARCHER IN HIGHER EDUCATION, ESPECIALLY A GRADUATE STUDENT, POSTDOC, OR AN UNTENURED FACULTY MEMBER, YOU PROBABLY FEEL A LOT OF PRESSURE TO PUBLISH ORIGINAL, PEER-REVIEWED RESEARCH. PREDATORY JOURNALS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS. PREDATORY PUBLISHING is the practice of soliciting IN 2017 research manuscripts to publish for profit while bypassing peer review and editorial standards. Predatory publishers appear genuine, often emailing authors invitations to submit articles. They quickly accept manuscripts The number and charge the author fees, but unlike of predatory legitimate open-access publishers who sometimes charge fees, predatory journals publishers don’t provide proper peer review and has risen appropriate editorial oversight. In fact, exponentially scammers in recent years1 Make false claims of peer review, • IN 2015 indexing, and archiving Falsify journal ranking and impact factors • Don’t follow standard policies for high IN 2011 • quality scholarly publishing, such as those outlined by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), the Council of Science Editors (CSE), and the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME). Don’t meet standards for professional All a predatory • In April 2019 the Federal Trade 2 publisher needs to scientific publications. Commission ruled that OMICS Sometimes list author names, editors, get started is a • International, a large publishing computer, a website, scientists, and their aliations on their company from India, pay fifty and a journal title. editorial pages without permission million dollars to authors and Buy-out reputable journals, then continue • others the company deceived. publication under a name that was OMICS publishes about 700 3 previously considered legitimate. journals and sponsors hundreds of annual vanity conferences and 1 Gupta, Kailash. 2015. “Opinion: Pay-to-Play Publishing, Online scientific journals are sacrificing the quality of research articles to make a buck.” Sep 3, 2015. The Scientist. workshops using predatory and Laine, Christine and Margaret A. Winker. 2017. “Identifying predatory or pseudo-journals.” Biochemia Medica. 2 Richtig, G., M. Berger, B. Lange-Asschenfeldt, W. Aberer, and E. Richtig. 2018. ‘’Problems and challenges of predatory journals.’ Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology. 3 Langdorf, Mark. 4 2018. “Predatory publisher attempts to compromise WestJEM’s integrity.” West J Emerging Medicine. 4 Brainard, Jerey. 2019. “US Judge rules deceptive publisher practices. should pay $50 million in damages.” Science. and Masic, Izet. 2017. “Predatory Publishing – Experience with OMICS International.” Med Arch. • An invitation to publish comes in an email, sometimes with flowery language, misspellings, and strange references Warning • Contact email addresses are non-professional/non-journal aliated • Publisher’s website contains spelling and grammatical errors. Signs Images are distorted or fuzzy, misleading, and/or unauthorized • Website’s homepage language targets authors of a predatory • Website promotes the purported Index Copernicus Value • Poor or no description of the manuscript handling process publication • Manuscripts submitted through email rather than a web management system • Rapid publication promised with ineective or no peer review • No retraction policy • Limited or no information on content’s digitally preservation • Initially, the journal charges authors a low article processing or publication fee (for example, below $150), but charges anywhere from $500 to $3,000 to publish once an article is accepted • A journal claiming to be open access fails to mention copyright • Publication’s scope of interest includes non-biomedical subjects alongside biomedical topics Best Practices IF YOU’RE INTERESTED IN PUBLISHING IF YOU’RE A PEER REVIEWER OR EDITOR • Check some basic reference lists to see if a • Thoroughly investigate any request to be a journal is either predatory or legitimate, such reviewer or editor of a journal as doaj.org, plos.org, predatoryjournals.com, • Check the credentials of other reviewers and cabells.com, thinkchecksubmit.org, and editors, and don’t be afraid to contact them Medline/Publine indexing. Although these and ask questions lists are not extensive, they can serve as • Be suspicious of the same issues authors valuable reference points to determine a face, including the pressure to respond to journal’s legitimacy. email solicitation • Don’t respond to a predatory journal’s email • Avoid journals that don’t carefully explain in • Check for a legitimate website. advance your role and responsibilities in • Select journals of interest early in the writing. Ask about the volume of work and research process and consult with mentors required response time. and trusted colleagues • Question journals that minimize the • Educate your co-authors so they can also importance of your review and don’t respond investigate suspicious journals to questions • Check your own manuscript references for • Investigate journals with multiple predatory journal articles “editors-in-chief” • Carefully review any legal matters with university counsel, such as written agreements, copyrights, usage limits, etc. • If you’re a graduate student, protect your It’s often not easy or possible to thesis or dissertation through an embargo retrieve a manuscript or submission fees once they are submitted to a predatory journal. It’s worth taking a few extra ULTIMATELY, THE measures to ensure that your work is published ethically for your BEST DEFENSE IS A benefit as well as that of your STRONG OFFENSE. scientific or academic community..
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  • How Frequently Are Articles in Predatory Open Access Journals Cited
    publications Article How Frequently Are Articles in Predatory Open Access Journals Cited Bo-Christer Björk 1,*, Sari Kanto-Karvonen 2 and J. Tuomas Harviainen 2 1 Hanken School of Economics, P.O. Box 479, FI-00101 Helsinki, Finland 2 Department of Information Studies and Interactive Media, Tampere University, FI-33014 Tampere, Finland; Sari.Kanto@ilmarinen.fi (S.K.-K.); tuomas.harviainen@tuni.fi (J.T.H.) * Correspondence: bo-christer.bjork@hanken.fi Received: 19 February 2020; Accepted: 24 March 2020; Published: 26 March 2020 Abstract: Predatory journals are Open Access journals of highly questionable scientific quality. Such journals pretend to use peer review for quality assurance, and spam academics with requests for submissions, in order to collect author payments. In recent years predatory journals have received a lot of negative media. While much has been said about the harm that such journals cause to academic publishing in general, an overlooked aspect is how much articles in such journals are actually read and in particular cited, that is if they have any significant impact on the research in their fields. Other studies have already demonstrated that only some of the articles in predatory journals contain faulty and directly harmful results, while a lot of the articles present mediocre and poorly reported studies. We studied citation statistics over a five-year period in Google Scholar for 250 random articles published in such journals in 2014 and found an average of 2.6 citations per article, and that 56% of the articles had no citations at all. For comparison, a random sample of articles published in the approximately 25,000 peer reviewed journals included in the Scopus index had an average of 18, 1 citations in the same period with only 9% receiving no citations.
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  • Predatory Publishing: Top 10 Things You Need to Know
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  • Predatory Publishing in Management Research: a Call for Open Peer Review, Management Learning, 50(5): 607-619
    Predatory Publishing Working to eliminate predatory journals and conferences Twittter: @fake_journals Web site: https://predatory-publishing.com/ Thank you for downloading this document. It contains the three papers referred to in the blog post: https://predatory-publishing.com/read-these-three-articles-to-understand-predatory-publishing/ Please see the post if you need reminding. The citation for the next article is: Beall, J. (2013) Predatory publishing is just one of the consequences of gold open access, Learned Publishing, 26(2): pp 79-84. DOI: 1087/20130203 Predatory publishing is just one of the consequences of gold open access 79 Predatory publishing is just one of the consequences of gold open access Jeffrey Beall Learned Publishing, 26: 79–84 doi:10.1087/20130203 POINT OF VIEW Predatory publishing is just Introduction I have been closely following and par- one of the consequences of ticipating in the open-access (OA) movement since 2008. In that year, when the gold OA model fi rst began to be implemented on a large scale, gold open access I noticed the appearance of several new publishers that lacked trans- Jeffrey BEALL parency and used deceptive websites University of Colorado Denver to attract manuscript submissions and the accompanying author fees. This article examines the ways the gold open-access model is negatively affecting scholarly Initially, I printed out copies of their communication. web pages and placed them in a blue folder. In 2009, I published a review of the publisher Bentham Open the communication of science. I increased dramatically worldwide, in the library review journal the argue that the gold OA model is a creating the need and the markets for Charleston Advisor.
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  • Predatory Publishing Practices: Is There Life After Beall's List?
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  • Identifying and Avoiding Predatory Publishers
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  • Avoiding Predatory Publishers*
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  • The Changing Landscape of Open Access Publishing
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  • Publish and Perish in the Hands of Predatory Journals
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  • Study of Predatory Open Access Nursing Journals Marilyn H
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  • Definitions of Predatory Publishing (E.G., Clark and Smith, 2015; Grudniewicz Et Al., 2019)
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  • Guide to Predatory Publishing
    Guide to Predatory Publishing Produced by the Open Access Working Group of the Leibniz Association, October 2018. As the publication market has changed, the number of journals has increased significantly. In some fields, there are so many publications that it is difficult to keep track of them all. They include some journals that do not feel obliged to comply with the rules of good scientific practice,1 and instead use the academic publishing market purely as a business model for the publishers. These publications, which are usually referred to as “predatory journals”, charge authors publication fees or article processing charges (APCs), but do not organise peer reviews or other appropriate forms of quality control. The publication of research findings in such journals primarily harms the authors involved, but also weakens public confidence in scientific research.2 In the following, we describe the phenomenon of predatory publishing in greater detail and present the necessary safeguards. What is the difference between predatory journals and serious journals? One of the main differences between predatory journals and serious scientific journals is that predatory journals largely do without editorial or quality control measures. In addition, one or more of the following will typically apply: • Predatory journals do not provide transparent costing – it is often unclear from the journal’s online presence or website what costs will be incurred and what they relate to. • Predatory journals list misleading or false information about indicators, especially impact factors. • Predatory journals offer very fast publication of manuscripts they receive, which is incompatible with the length of time usually required to carry out a serious review process.
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