Strategy Division, Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung, Bern, Switzerland
Graduate School for Health Sciences, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jul 21;11(7):e050270. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-050270.
To describe and compare the characteristics of scholars who reviewed for predatory or legitimate journals in terms of their sociodemographic characteristics and reviewing and publishing behaviour.
Linkage of random samples of predatory journals and legitimate journals of the Cabells Scholarly Analytics' journal lists with the Publons database, employing the Jaro-Winkler string metric. Descriptive analysis of sociodemographic characteristics and reviewing and publishing behaviour of scholars for whom reviews were found in the Publons database.
Peer review of journal articles.
Reviewers who submitted peer review reports to Publons.
Numbers of reviews for predatory journals and legitimate journals per reviewer. Academic age of reviewers, the total number of reviews, number of publications and number of reviews and publications per year.
Analyses included 183 743 unique reviews submitted to Publons by 19 598 reviewers. Six thousand and seventy-seven reviews were for 1160 predatory journals (3.31% of all reviews) and 177 666 reviews for 6403 legitimate journals (96.69%). Most scholars never submitted reviews for predatory journals (90.0% of all scholars); few scholars (7.6%) reviewed occasionally or rarely (1.9%) for predatory journals. Very few scholars submitted reviews predominantly or exclusively for predatory journals (0.26% and 0.35%, respectively). The latter groups of scholars were of younger academic age and had fewer publications and reviews than the first groups. Regions with the highest shares of predatory reviews were sub-Saharan Africa (21.8% reviews for predatory journals), Middle East and North Africa (13.9%) and South Asia (7.0%), followed by North America (2.1%), Latin America and the Caribbean (2.1%), Europe and Central Asia (1.9%) and East Asia and the Pacific (1.5%).
To tackle predatory journals, universities, funders and publishers need to consider the entire research workflow and educate reviewers on concepts of quality and legitimacy in scholarly publishing.
描述和比较在掠夺性或合法期刊上进行评审的学者的特征,包括他们的社会人口统计学特征和评审及发表行为。
将 Cabells Scholarly Analytics 期刊列表中的随机抽样的掠夺性期刊和合法期刊与 Publons 数据库进行链接,使用 Jaro-Winkler 字符串度量。对 Publons 数据库中找到评审报告的学者的社会人口统计学特征和评审及发表行为进行描述性分析。
期刊文章的同行评审。
向 Publons 提交同行评审报告的评审者。
每位评审者的掠夺性期刊和合法期刊评审数量。评审者的学术年龄、总评审数量、出版物数量以及每年的评审和出版物数量。
分析包括 19598 位评审者向 Publons 提交的 183743 条独特评审记录。有 6077 条评审记录来自 1160 种掠夺性期刊(所有评审记录的 3.31%),177666 条评审记录来自 6403 种合法期刊(96.69%)。大多数学者从未提交过掠夺性期刊的评审记录(所有学者的 90.0%);少数学者(7.6%)偶尔或很少(1.9%)评审掠夺性期刊。极少数学者主要或专门评审掠夺性期刊(分别为 0.26%和 0.35%)。后两组学者的学术年龄更年轻,出版物和评审记录也少于前两组。掠夺性评审记录比例最高的地区是撒哈拉以南非洲(掠夺性期刊评审记录占 21.8%)、中东和北非(13.9%)和南亚(7.0%),其次是北美(2.1%)、拉丁美洲和加勒比(2.1%)、欧洲和中亚(1.9%)以及东亚和太平洋地区(1.5%)。
为了解决掠夺性期刊问题,大学、资助者和出版商需要考虑整个研究工作流程,并教育评审者有关学术出版质量和合法性的概念。