| Literature DB >> 32968546 |
Mohammad Hosseini1, Martin Paul Eve2, Bert Gordijn1, Cameron Neylon3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inaccurate citations are erroneous quotations or instances of paraphrasing of previously published material that mislead readers about the claims of the cited source. They are often unaddressed due to underreporting, the inability of peer reviewers and editors to detect them, and editors' reluctance to publish corrections about them. In this paper, we propose a new tool that could be used to tackle their circulation.Entities:
Keywords: Annotations; Editorial process; Inaccurate citations; Post-publication peer-review; Research integrity; Responsibilities
Year: 2020 PMID: 32968546 PMCID: PMC7500547 DOI: 10.1186/s41073-020-00099-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Integr Peer Rev ISSN: 2058-8615
Fig. 1Contributing factors to the publication and circulation of articles with inaccurate citations. Green boxes represent some parties that could prevent the propagation of inaccurate citations but often do not do this
Possible outcomes and problems of reporting inaccurate citations using current methods
| Method | Possible outcomes | Problems |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Contacting the editor | • Publication of a corrigendum • No correction, editor contacting authors with a note to be more careful in the future • Being ignored | • Burdensome for the reporter and the editoral team • Impractical to do for every single inaccuracy |
| 2. Submission of a commentary/letter | • Acceptance of commentary/letter and publication of a corrigendum • Acceptance of commentary/letter and publication of a response commentary/letter by the citing authors in reaction to the first letter with/without the publication of a corrigendum • Acceptance of commentary/letter without any further response from the citing authors, or reaction from the editors • Rejection of the commentary/letter | • Burdensome for the reporter and the editorial team • Impractical to do for every single inaccuracy |
| 3. Email corresponding authors | • Submission of a corrigendum by authors and having the inaccuracy corrected • Submission of a corrigendum and having it rejected by the editors • Being ignored | • The reporter may remain out of the communication loop • The inaccuracy may never be reported to the journal |
| 4. Post on social media | • Submission of a corrigendum by authors and having it corrected • Submission of a corrigendum and having it rejected by the editors • Being ignored • Having the comment deleted | • Complicated to distinguish genuine report from trolls • Comments can be deleted by account owners • Scientists who are not on social media will not be aware of it • Exposure to non-experts |
| 5. Use PubPeer | • Editors of the journals with a • Citing authors act on the reported inaccuracy and submit a corrigendum which may be accepted or rejected • Citing authors ignore the report • Other researchers including the citing/cited authors may make further comments or ignore it altogether | • Prose comments do not appear in the text • Comments are not linked to citations • Cited authors are not notified • Not fully open and free for all users • Possible to make anonymous comments |
| 6. Current annotation platforms | • Editors of the journals who wish to be informed will get a notification. They may react with/without a corrigendum, or ignore the report • Citing authors act on the reported inaccuracy and submit a corrigendum which may be accepted or rejected • Citing authors ignore the report • Other researchers including the citing/cited authors may make further comments or ignore it altogether | • Comments are not visible across platforms • Comments are not linked to citations • Cited authors are not notified • Not possible to create an index of inaccurate citations |
Fig. 2A graphical prototype of MyCites tool that would appear by clicking on an in-text citation
Fig. 3Annotating inaccurate citations benefits various parties and streamlines the process of reporting errors