| Literature DB >> 33621261 |
Leonid Tiokhin1, Karthik Panchanathan2, Daniel Lakens1, Simine Vazire3, Thomas Morgan4,5, Kevin Zollman6.
Abstract
Academic journals provide a key quality-control mechanism in science. Yet, information asymmetries and conflicts of interests incentivize scientists to deceive journals about the quality of their research. How can honesty be ensured, despite incentives for deception? Here, we address this question by applying the theory of honest signaling to the publication process. Our models demonstrate that several mechanisms can ensure honest journal submission, including differential benefits, differential costs, and costs to resubmitting rejected papers. Without submission costs, scientists benefit from submitting all papers to high-ranking journals, unless papers can only be submitted a limited number of times. Counterintuitively, our analysis implies that inefficiencies in academic publishing (e.g., arbitrary formatting requirements, long review times) can serve a function by disincentivizing scientists from submitting low-quality work to high-ranking journals. Our models provide simple, powerful tools for understanding how to promote honest paper submission in academic publishing.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33621261 PMCID: PMC7901761 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0246675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240