| Literature DB >> 34827029 |
Bharat Gurnani1, Kirandeep Kaur2.
Abstract
This article aims at analyzing the impact of predatory publishing in ophthalmology, criteria to identify a legitimate journal, red flags of a predatory journal, sources, and checkpoints available before publishing scientific work in a standard ophthalmology journal. A retrospective review was performed and a list of suspected Ophthalmology predatory journals was extracted through four major so-called blacklists: Beall's, Cabell's, Manca's, and Strinzel's list. This list of journals was then cross-referenced with the UGC CARE and vetted whitelist of vision science journals to remove the legitimate journals. Moreover, as all the predatory journals are supposed to be open access, all possible types of open-access journals on the Scimago webpage were also searched. A gross estimate in terms of publication cost was searched for, and a list of authentic links to find out a legitimate journal was prepared. Additionally, the methodology by which these predatory journals penetrate legitimate indexes such as PubMed was also evaluated. A total of 51 ophthalmology predatory journals were enlisted. Thirty-eight out of 124 Ophthalmology journals listed on Scimago were open access, and the cost of publishing in predatory journals ranged from USD50-500, which is substantially lower than that in legitimate journals (USD 50-3000). A total of 13 open-access platforms exist, with 10 characteristic red flags to identify a predatory journal. These journals have penetrated legitimate indexes such as PubMed by similar-sounding names to the legitimate journals and have published articles with external funding, which needs indexing. Predatory publishing impacts the quality of research in every field, including Ophthalmology, and must be discouraged.Entities:
Keywords: Predatory journals; PubMed; Scimago; predatory publishing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34827029 PMCID: PMC8837306 DOI: 10.4103/ijo.IJO_1639_21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Ophthalmol ISSN: 0301-4738 Impact factor: 1.848
Criteria to identify legitimate journal and red flags to identify a predatory journal[12]
| Characteristic | Legitimate Journal - Criteria | Predatory Journal - Red Flags |
|---|---|---|
| Language | Authentic language, no grammatical mistakes, a concise sentence with a crisp explanation of instruction | Personalized invitation emails in deceiving language often from various specialty, not necessarily linked to one own specialty |
| Publication approach | Clear instruction regarding submission, peer review, publication, and availability of articles online and in print through the standardized submission portal of the journal website. | Promise for rapid submission, processing, publication, and online availability of article often through email or ill-developed or substandard submission portal |
| Authors are required to make an account; the account is verified and then the submission process starts | ||
| Good-quality articles published with copyright statements | ||
| Indexing | Indexed in all the authentic and standard indices with ISSN number and DOI number. Most of the standard journals are available in PubMed and Google Scholar citation database, Scopus, Medline, listed in Scimago webpage list, and Journal Citation Reports. | Indexing in various nonstandard indices |
| Deficient in International Standard Serial Number (ISSN) or Digital Object Identifier (DOI) listed with published articles on the journal’s website, promotion of various substandard indices | ||
| Authentic indices like PubMed and Google Scholar missing | ||
| Article Processing Charges (APC) or Publication charges | Standard journals with high impact factors usually have no APC. Major journals ask for APC for open access. | Direct link for APC often missing on website and email |
| Transparent policy regarding APC usually for color image charges | Lack of transparency, APC varying from USD50 to 3000 and Multiple emails negotiating APC | |
| Some authentic journals ask for minimal article submission charges (ASC) | Some journals agree for free publication in the spam mail which gets deleted after 30 days | |
| Specialties | Specialty journals maintained by stalwarts in the field | Different specialties approaching different authors in search of monetary benefits |
| Never approach an author to expect for review articles and guest editorials | ||
| High impact factor with citations | ||
| Background Information | Clear and easy to understand journal and author instructions | Usually associated with local publishers, publisher information, Journal location, editor details, contact address, phone number, address often missing. Journal previous issues are missing, a large number of articles having gross inaccuracies and grammatical errors |
| Linked to standard publishers like Elsevier, Springer, and MedKnow. | Fake bibliometric data like impact factor and citations | |
| Data and bibliometrics available, citations, impact factor, previous prints, downloads, and reads | Display of logos mimicking well-established journals | |
| Manuscript Submission | Through authors portal after signing up as an author in journal’s webpage database | Poorly maintained submission portal with language errors, asking for direct submission through emails. |
| Strict submission guidelines regarding title page, cover letter, manuscript format, and image characteristics with a technical check before editorial and peer-review process. | Often glorifying the author’s previously published article in a reputed journal and asking for submission on a similar line or a commentary. | |
| Tables, references, and word limits have rules which need to be followed | Asking authors to join as an editorial board member with a Curriculum Vitae (CV). | |
| Poor quality images post-publication. | ||
| Lack of proper authors instructions compromising ethical standards | ||
| Give an option of submission to various journals with a list of associated journals, | ||
| Peer-review process | Stringent, Rigorous, and Time-consuming | Expedited review within 3 days |
| Usually, 3-5 reviewers for major articles with expert comments for authors to shape the article as per journal standards and quality | Usually, no mistakes are identified in the manuscript | |
| Double-blinded peer review with a final decision by the editor based on reviewers comments | Approach through WhatsApp or Google Hangouts for changes and processing charges without proper email or authentic communication. | |
| Timeline | From submission to publication, average time taken by major standard journals is 3-4 months | Expedited review and publication promise within a week. |
| Article availability online immediately post APC submission | ||
| Previous editions | Previous issues can be easily surfed. | Authentic data regarding the previous edition missing, not identified on the website or and search engine. |
| 10-20-year data of article published online available | ||
| Open access charges apply for major journals. |
Sources for identifying a legitimate journal
| Source | Link |
|---|---|
| The Think. Check. Submit. Initiative[ |
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| Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)[ |
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| Committee of Publication Ethics (COPE)[ |
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| Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association (OASPA)[ |
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| Cabell’s blacklist[ |
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| Beall’s blacklist[ |
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| Strinzel’s blacklist[ |
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| Google Scholar[ |
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| PubMed[ |
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| PubMed Central[ |
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| MEDLINE[ |
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| Scimago List[ |
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| Predatory Journals list[ |
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| UGC CARE Whitelist[ |
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| Vetted List (Whitelist) of Vision Science Journals[ |
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Types of open access archives[2829]
| Type of Open access | Description |
|---|---|
| Gold | Double-blinded, Peer-reviewed, Open-access journals are freely available on the Internet. Some publishers may charge APC. |
| Green | Researchers can self-archive publications in institutional repositories -provide free unlimited online access to self-archived versions of publications based on publishers’ discretion. |
| Hybrid or Dual Mode | Both OA and subscription print-based access offered. |
| Diamond | Subcategory of Gold open access, article are freely published and are OA |
| Eprint archive | Preprint and postprint available in author’s OA archive |
| Abstract | Only Abstract available as OA |
| Author fee | Post author manuscript charges open-access available |
| Partial Open Access | Only some articles in an edition are open access |
| Delayed | OA is available some months down the line |
| Unqualified | Immediate OA of full-text article |
| Per capita | OA is available based on the per capita income of the country |
| Libre | Open license-based articles can be used or shared |
| Gratis | Free online available article but reuse is restricted based on copyright reserves |