Sting Operation’: The Stunning Percentage of Science Journals That Accepted a Completely Bogus Study
Science magazine wanted to figure out just how legitimate open-access, peer-reviewed journals are. So, it set out to dupe them with a completely fake study.
What it found is surprising some in the
scientific industry, while only confirming the fears of others. More
than half of the journals John Bohannon submitted his paper about the
fictitious, anticancer properties identified in a lichen compound were
accepted for publication.
The first and easiest clue that could
have been picked out by the journals was that the study’s
author, Ocorrafoo Cobange, does not exist as a real person, nor does his
research institute, the Wassee Institute of Medicine.
But beyond that, Bohannon wrote in Science
that “any reviewer with more than a high-school knowledge of chemistry
and the ability to understand a basic data plot should have spotted the
paper’s short-comings immediately.”
“Its experiments are so hopelessly flawed that the results are meaningless,” Bohannon continued.
The experiment was testing so-called
“open-access” journals — those that are not subscription based. There
are some who advocate in favor of open-access to help spread scientific
knowledge, while others want the system to remain remain
subscription-oriented, which can create a financial barrier.
Of the 304 submissions of the fake
study during a 10-month timeframe (only 255 submitted received some sort
of response from editors) 157 seemed to miss the study’s “fatal flaws”
in the “sting operation” that Bohannan said shows “the contours of an
emerging Wild West in academic publishing.”
Sixty percent of this 255 didn’t
undergo any peer review, which for those that were rejected is “good
news,” according to Bohannan, because it means editors didn’t even waste
reviewers time with it. For those that accepted it without peer review
it means “the paper was rubber-stamped without being read by anyone.”
Of the 106 submissions that did
undergo review, only 36 recognized the scientific problems with the
study. Sixteen publications, even with “damning reviews,” still accepted
the paper.
Here’s more from Bohannan’s perspective on what the sting revealed.(emphasis added):
From humble and idealistic beginnings a decade ago, open-access scientific journals have mushroomed into a global industry, driven by author publication fees rather than traditional subscriptions. Most of the players are murky. The identity and location of the journals’ editors, as well as the financial workings of their publishers, are often purposefully obscured. But Science‘s investigation casts a powerful light. Internet Protocol (IP) address traces within the raw headers of e-mails sent by journal editors betray their locations. Invoices for publication fees reveal a network of bank accounts based mostly in the developing world. And the acceptances and rejections of the paper provide the first global snapshot of peer review across the open-access scientific enterprise.[...]Acceptance was the norm, not the exception. The paper was accepted by journals hosted by industry titans Sage and Elsevier. The paper was accepted by journals published by prestigious academic institutions such as Kobe University in Japan. It was accepted by scholarly society journals. It was even accepted by journals for which the paper’s topic was utterly inappropriate, such as the Journal of Experimental & Clinical Assisted Reproduction.
What it seems to come down to is profit.
“But even when editors and bank
accounts are in the developing world, the company that ultimately reaps
the profits may be based in the United States or Europe. In some cases,
academic publishing powerhouses sit at the top of the chain,” Bohannan
wrote.
Another interesting find was that an
open-access journal that Bohannan said is among the many that have been
“criticized for poor quality control” actually had the “most rigorous
peer review of all.” The journal PLOS One, for example, was the only one
pointing out some of the study’s ethical issues. This journal rejected
the fictitious paper due to poor scientific quality.
Read about the full investigation in Bohannan’s full article in Science.
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/10/04/sting-operation-the-stunning-percentage-of-science-journals-that-accepted-a-completely-bogus-study/
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