Division of Vascular and Interventional Radiology, Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, 1800 Orleans St, Zayed Tower 7203, Baltimore, MD 21287.
University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, La Jolla, CA.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2021 Jan;216(1):233-240. doi: 10.2214/AJR.20.22923. Epub 2020 Oct 28.
The objective of our study was to help academic researchers avoid predatory publishers by characterizing the problem with respect to radiology and medical imaging and to test an intervention to address aggressive e-mail solicitation. In total, 803 faculty from 10 U.S. academic radiology departments and 193 faculty in the senior author's department were surveyed about their experiences with soliciting journals. To document the characteristics of these journals and their publishers, we retrospectively reviewed the academic institutional e-mail box of one radiologist over 51 days. Journals' bibliometric parameters were compared with those of established medical imaging journals offering open access publishing. We tested filters for selected syntax to identify spam e-mails during two time periods. Of 996 faculty, 206 responded (16% nationally, 42% locally). Most (98%) received e-mails from soliciting publishers. Only 7% published articles with these publishers. Submission reasons were invitations, fee waivers, and difficulty publishing elsewhere. Overall, 94 publishers sent 257 e-mails in 51 days, 50 of which offered publishing opportunities in 76 imaging journals. Six journals were indexed in PubMed, and two had verifiable impact factors. The six PubMed-indexed journals had a lower mean publication fee ($824) than top medical imaging journals ($3034) ( < 0.001) and had a shorter mean duration of existence (9.5 vs 49.0 years, respectively; = 0.005). The e-mail filters captured 71% of soliciting e-mails during the initial 51-day period and 85% during the same period 1 year later. Soliciting publishers have little impact on scientific literature. Academicians can avoid soliciting e-mails with customized e-mail filters.
我们的研究目的是帮助学术研究人员避免落入掠夺性出版商的陷阱,为此我们对放射学和医学影像学领域的相关问题进行了特征描述,并测试了一种干预措施来解决激进的电子邮件征稿问题。我们总共调查了美国 10 个学术放射科系的 803 名教员和高级作者所在系的 193 名教员,了解他们在征稿期刊方面的经历。为了记录这些期刊及其出版商的特征,我们回顾性地审查了一位放射科医生在 51 天内的学术机构电子邮件信箱。我们将这些期刊的文献计量参数与提供开放获取出版的知名医学影像学期刊进行了比较。在两个时间段内,我们测试了针对特定语法的筛选器,以识别垃圾电子邮件。在 996 名教员中,有 206 名(全国 16%,本地 42%)做出了回应。大多数教员(98%)收到了征稿出版商的电子邮件。只有 7%的人在这些出版商处发表过文章。投稿的原因是征稿、费用豁免和在其他地方发表困难。总体而言,在 51 天内,94 家出版商发送了 257 封电子邮件,其中 50 封提供了在 76 种影像学期刊上发表的机会。有 6 种期刊被 PubMed 索引,其中 2 种有可核实的影响因子。这 6 种被 PubMed 索引的期刊的平均出版费(824 美元)低于顶级医学影像学期刊(3034 美元)(<0.001),存在时间的平均长度也较短(分别为 9.5 年和 49.0 年;=0.005)。电子邮件筛选器在最初的 51 天内捕获了 71%的征稿电子邮件,一年后同一时期捕获了 85%的征稿电子邮件。征稿出版商对科学文献的影响很小。学者可以使用定制的电子邮件筛选器来避免收到征稿电子邮件。