| Literature DB >> 32297306 |
Abstract
In December of 2019, the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) updated its recommendations. As occurs regularly with the ICMJE recommendations, this document was edited and tweaked, and thus fortified and verified. At least one new fortifying positive element was introduced, namely that peer reviewers who relied on the assistance of others during peer review need to declare this to editors. This fortifies publishing integrity, via transparency, in the peer review process in biomedical science. However, a new clause was introduced: "Authors should avoid citing articles in predatory or pseudo-journals." This is controversial because the precise nature of "predatory" publishing venues, either journals or publishers, is unclear and several parameters used by existing blacklists are unreliable and thus debatable. It is concerning that these edited recommendations were simultaneously published in 13 medical journals.Keywords: Blacklists; Exceptionalism; Fake; Integrity; International Committee of Medical Journal Editors; Predatory publishing
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32297306 DOI: 10.1007/s11845-020-02227-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ir J Med Sci ISSN: 0021-1265 Impact factor: 1.568