| Literature DB >> 30306968 |
Abstract
In today's world when biomedical science is experiencing continuous threats from various sources, publication of research articles in predatory journals has created a major havoc. These predatory journals are publishing worthless biomedical science which will haunt genuine researchers and keen readers of authentic biomedical journals for several decades. Hence, researchers of various disciplines and academic experience should be continuously made aware of these predatory publishers and potential ways to recognize them. The main aim of this article is to discuss the issues related to predatory publishing, techniques and strategies used by these publishers to prey young inexperienced researchers, and disadvantages of publishing in predatory journals.Entities:
Keywords: Deception; open access publishing; peer research; professional misconduct; publishing; review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30306968 PMCID: PMC6198688 DOI: 10.4103/jpgm.JPGM_347_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Postgrad Med ISSN: 0022-3859 Impact factor: 1.476
Editor and staff issues in predatory journals[32]
| The sole owner of the publication company is presented as editor in chief of each and every journal being published under the publisher or organization or in other instances no particular individual is presented as editor of specific journal |
| The journal web page does not present any list to identify members of editorial/review board |
| No information regarding the position or affiliation of editor, editorial board, or review board member are displayed on the web page of journal |
| In most instances, evidence exists that neither the editor nor the review board members possess expertise required to qualify them to be a reviewer or gate keepers particular to the scope of the journal |
| More than one journals with different scopes have duplicate editorial boards |
| The editorial board members show little or no geographical diversity even when journals claim to be international in scope or coverage they display |
| Most pseudo or predatory journals have insufficient number of board members (e.g., 2 or 3 members), show a huge list of editorial board members with cooked up names, or name scholars on their editorial board without their knowledge or prior permission |
Other miscellaneous issues in predatory journals[32]
| These journals are often found re-publishing manuscripts, editorials which are already published in other journals, magazines, newspapers, or even in conferences without providing appropriate credits |
| Often claim to be a “leading publisher” using fake boastful language even though being just a start-up publisher |
| Provides very minimal or no proofreading of submissions before publishing |
| Displays “contact us” information just in the form of a web-based form or an email address without displaying actual address |
Business management or publishing policy issues in predatory journals[32]
| Shows no transparency in demonstrating publishing policy or method of long-term digital preservation |
| Operates large number of journals from a common web page with links for submission of manuscript from a hijacked or duplicate mimicking web page of reputed journals |
| Shows no transparency in providing information regarding author’s fees and later on provides unanticipated surprise invoice charging additional fee to be paid for publication of manuscript |
| Shows fake logos of various esteemed indexing services on their webpage but allows little or no scope for search engines to access the published content thus preventing the content from being discovered by search engines and getting indexed in reputed indexes |
| Locks their final published Portable Document Formats i.e. PDFs by Copy-proofs (locks), thus making them extremely difficult to detect plagiarism |
Integrity issues in predatory journals[32]
| The name of predatory journals is not in accordance to journals scope, mission, and their true origin, e.g., a journal with country name like Australian, Swiss, or Canadian has no publisher, editor, or any institutional affiliate related to country name mentioned in journals’ name |
| These journals are often found indulging in unethical practices like either displaying fake Thomson-Reuters impact factors even when they are not registered or display impact factors assigned by fake “impact factor” services to deceive the young and inexperienced researchers |
| Publishers of these journals often send spam requests to young and unqualified scholars to peer-review submitted manuscripts which are beyond the expertise of unqualified scholars |
| Predatory publisher tries to deceive young inexperienced researchers by falsely claiming that their journal contents are indexed in legitimate abstracting and indexing services or even try to claim contents to be indexed in services with fake cooked up names which either do not exist or if they exist they are not involved in abstracting or indexing services |
| Predatory publisher often asks the corresponding author for suggesting reviewers and often seeks help of these suggested reviewers without sufficiently enquiring or analyzing their qualifications or authenticity |