By GINA KOLATA, MARCH 22, 2017,
New York Times
The applicant’s nom de plume was
not exactly subtle, if you know Polish. The middle initial and surname of the
author, Anna O. Szust, mean “fraudster.” Her publications were fake and her
degrees were fake. The book chapters she listed among her publications could
not be found, but perhaps that should not have been a surprise because the book
publishers were fake, too.
Yet, when Dr. Fraud applied to
360 randomly selected open-access academic journals asking to be an editor, 48
accepted her and four made her editor in chief. She got two offers to start a
new journal and be its editor. One journal sent her an email saying, “It’s our
pleasure to add your name as our editor in chief for the journal with no
responsibilities.”
Little did they know that they
had fallen for a sting, plotted and carried out by a group of researchers who
wanted to draw attention to and systematically document the seamy side of
open-access publishing. While those types of journals began with earnest
aspirations to make scientific papers available to everyone, their
proliferation has had unintended consequences.
Traditional journals typically
are supported by subscribers who pay a fee while authors pay nothing to be
published. Nonsubscribers can only read papers if they pay the journal for each
one they want to see.
Open-access journals reverse that
model. The authors pay and the published papers are free to anyone who cares to
read them.
Publishing in an open-access
journal can be expensive — the highly regarded Public Library of Science (PLOS)
journals charge from $1,495 to $2,900 to publish a paper, with the fee
dependent on which of its journals accepts the paper.
Not everyone anticipated what
would happen next, or to what extent it would happen. The open-access business
model spawned a shadowy world of what have been called predatory journals. They
may have similar names to legitimate journals, but exist by publishing just
about anything sent to them for a fee that can range from under $100 to
thousands of dollars.
The fee often is between $100 and
$400, said Jeffrey Beall, scholarly communications librarian at the University
of Colorado, Denver, as the journals compete for paying customers. Of course,
it is easier for predatory journals to have low fees because their expenses are
minimal.
The researchers decided not to
list any of the fake journals that they uncovered in the sting, saying that
some have names so close to those of legitimate journals that it would be
confusing.
There are now thousands of fake
open-access journals, about as many as legitimate ones, according to one of the
creators of Dr. Fraud, Katarzyna Pisanski, a researcher in the School of
Psychology at the University of Sussex in England, and her colleagues.
It was that alternate world that
Dr. Fraud tapped into. The legitimate journals rejected her application out of
hand, but many fake ones did not hesitate to take her on.
The investigators, writing about
their sting operation in Nature, said they had seen young colleagues fall for
the blandishments of predatory journals, not realizing that the emails they
received were from publications that only wanted their money. Dr. Pisanski and
her colleagues wanted to help researchers understand how fake journals
operated.
“The emails can be very
flattering,” Dr. Pisanski said, telling the recipients they are “eminent
researchers” and “inviting” them to contribute. When researchers respond and
send in papers, “they are published at lightning speed, often without peer
review,” she said.
But not everyone who publishes in
these journals is an innocent dupe. Mr. Beall, who until recently published a
list of predatory journals, said he believes many researchers know exactly what
they are doing when they publish there.
“I believe there are countless
researchers and academics, currently employed, who have secured jobs,
promotions, and tenure using publications in pay-to-publish journals as part of
their credentials and experience for the jobs and promotions they got,” Mr.
Beall said.
And it can require real diligence
on the part of employers to ferret out those questionable publications, Mr. Beall
said.
“Examining someone’s publications
now requires close scrutiny,” Mr. Beall said. “Merely eyeballing a C.V. is
insufficient now.”
David Knutson, the manager of
communications at PLOS, said that young researchers may feel relentless
pressure to publish, at all costs.
“These authors are shopping
around their papers,” he said. “There is so much pressure to publish.”
As for Dr. Fraud, she got some
lucrative offers. One journal suggested she organize a conference, whose papers
would then be published; she would get 40 percent of the proceeds. Another
invited her to start a new journal and offered her 30 percent of the profits.
Dr. Pisanski and her colleagues
told the journals that accepted Dr. Fraud that she wanted to withdraw her
application to be an editor. But it was not easy to withdraw.
Dr. Fraud remains listed as a
member of the editorial boards of at least 11 of those journals. She is also
listed as a member of conference-organizing committees. At least one journal
she did not apply to also listed her as an editor.
And, Dr. Pisanski and her
colleagues wrote, Dr. Fraud is even listed as an advisory board member of the
Journals Open Access Indexing Committee. Its mission? To “increase the
visibility and ease of use of open-access scholarly journals.”
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