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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Feb 21, 2019
Date Accepted: May 7, 2019

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Perspectives From Authors and Editors in the Biomedical Disciplines on Predatory Journals: Survey Study

Cohen AJ, Patino G, Kamal P, Ndoye M, Tresh A, Mena J, Butler C, Washington S, Breyer BN

Perspectives From Authors and Editors in the Biomedical Disciplines on Predatory Journals: Survey Study

J Med Internet Res 2019;21(8):e13769

DOI: 10.2196/13769

PMID: 31471960

PMCID: 6743260

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Perspectives From Authors and Editors in the Biomedical Disciplines on Predatory Journals: Survey Study

  • Andrew J Cohen; 
  • German Patino; 
  • Puneet Kamal; 
  • Medina Ndoye; 
  • Anas Tresh; 
  • Jorge Mena; 
  • Christi Butler; 
  • Samuel Washington; 
  • Benjamin N Breyer

Background:

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.

Objective:

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.

Methods:

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.

Results:

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.

Conclusions:

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.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Cohen AJ, Patino G, Kamal P, Ndoye M, Tresh A, Mena J, Butler C, Washington S, Breyer BN

Perspectives From Authors and Editors in the Biomedical Disciplines on Predatory Journals: Survey Study

J Med Internet Res 2019;21(8):e13769

DOI: 10.2196/13769

PMID: 31471960

PMCID: 6743260

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