Cohen Andrew J, Patino German, Kamal Puneet, Ndoye Medina, Tresh Anas, Mena Jorge, Butler Christi, Washington Samuel, Breyer Benjamin N
Department of Urology, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2019 Aug 30;21(8):e13769. doi: 10.2196/13769.
Predatory journals fail to fulfill the tenets of biomedical publication: peer review, circulation, and access in perpetuity. Despite increasing attention in the lay and scientific press, no studies have directly assessed the perceptions of the authors or editors involved.
Our objective was to understand the motivation of authors in sending their work to potentially predatory journals. Moreover, we aimed to understand the perspective of journal editors at journals cited as potentially predatory.
Potential online predatory journals were randomly selected among 350 publishers and their 2204 biomedical journals. Author and editor email information was valid for 2227 total potential participants. A survey for authors and editors was created in an iterative fashion and distributed. Surveys assessed attitudes and knowledge about predatory publishing. Narrative comments were invited.
A total of 249 complete survey responses were analyzed. A total of 40% of editors (17/43) surveyed were not aware that they were listed as an editor for the particular journal in question. A total of 21.8% of authors (45/206) confirmed a lack of peer review. Whereas 77% (33/43) of all surveyed editors were at least somewhat familiar with predatory journals, only 33.0% of authors (68/206) were somewhat familiar with them (P<.001). Only 26.2% of authors (54/206) were aware of Beall's list of predatory journals versus 49% (21/43) of editors (P<.001). A total of 30.1% of authors (62/206) believed their publication was published in a predatory journal. After defining predatory publishing, 87.9% of authors (181/206) surveyed would not publish in the same journal in the future.
Authors publishing in suspected predatory journals are alarmingly uninformed in terms of predatory journal quality and practices. Editors' increased familiarity with predatory publishing did little to prevent their unwitting listing as editors. Some suspected predatory journals did provide services akin to open access publication. Education, research mentorship, and a realignment of research incentives may decrease the impact of predatory publishing.
掠夺性期刊未能践行生物医学出版的原则:同行评审、发行及永久获取。尽管在大众媒体和科学期刊上受到越来越多的关注,但尚无研究直接评估相关作者或编辑的看法。
我们的目的是了解作者将其作品投往潜在掠夺性期刊的动机。此外,我们旨在了解被列为潜在掠夺性期刊的编辑的观点。
从350家出版商及其2204种生物医学期刊中随机选择潜在的在线掠夺性期刊。作者和编辑的电子邮件信息对总共2227名潜在参与者有效。以迭代方式创建并分发了针对作者和编辑的调查问卷。调查评估了对掠夺性出版的态度和知识。邀请提供叙述性评论。
共分析了249份完整的调查回复。在接受调查的编辑中,共有40%(17/43)不知道自己被列为所涉特定期刊的编辑。共有21.8%的作者(45/206)证实缺乏同行评审。在所有接受调查的编辑中,77%(33/43)至少对掠夺性期刊有所了解,而只有33.0%的作者(68/206)对其有所了解(P<0.001)。只有26.2%的作者(54/206)知道贝尔的掠夺性期刊列表,而编辑中有49%(21/43)知道(P<0.001)。共有30.1%的作者(62/206)认为他们的论文发表在掠夺性期刊上。在定义了掠夺性出版后,87.9%的接受调查的作者(181/–206)未来不会在同一期刊上发表论文。
在可疑的掠夺性期刊上发表论文的作者对掠夺性期刊的质量和做法惊人地缺乏了解。编辑对掠夺性出版的更多了解几乎未能阻止他们不知情地被列为编辑。一些可疑的掠夺性期刊确实提供了类似于开放获取出版的服务。教育、研究指导以及研究激励的重新调整可能会减少掠夺性出版的影响。