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PROTECT YOUR PATRONS FROM PREDATORY PUBLISHERS By Jeffrey Beall University of Colorado Denver.

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Presentation on theme: "PROTECT YOUR PATRONS FROM PREDATORY PUBLISHERS By Jeffrey Beall University of Colorado Denver."— Presentation transcript:

1 PROTECT YOUR PATRONS FROM PREDATORY PUBLISHERS By Jeffrey Beall University of Colorado Denver

2 INTRODUCTION About the speaker University of Colorado Denver Auraria Campus

3 SCHOLARLY PUBLISHING MODELS Gold open-access model Freely available Article-processing charges (APCs) Subscription model (toll-access, traditional) Open-Access Movement Green open-access model Platinum open-access model

4 PREDATORY PUBLISHERS Conflict of interest Scientific integrity Unwarranted profit

5 Spam email from a predatory mega-journal ISSN Quick acceptance Indexing International

6 HISTORY OF PREDATORY PUBLISHERS Spam email, 2008-2009 Call for paper [sic] Reviews in The Charleston Advisor Early lists New blog in early 2012 Two lists – Questionable publishers, questionable standalone journals Purpose of lists – help researchers avoid being scammed

7 PREDATORY PUBLISHERS – THE FIVE Ws WHO ARE THE PREDATORY PUBLISHERS ? Usually small, one-man operations Operate out of a dwelling Ibima Publishing

8 WHAT ARE THE PREDATORY PUBLISHERS ? Publishers that exploit the gold-open access model for their own profit Can be corrupt Customers include people fooled by them Customers can also be complicit authors

9 WHERE ARE THE PREDATORY PUBLISHERS ? South Asia, Nigeria, UK, Ontario, Australia, US Expatriates in Western countries catering to their home countries More academic credit for “International” journals American Journal of _________.

10 WHEN DID THE PREDATORY PUBLISHERS APPEAR ? Gold OA began in early 2000s Really began to increase in late 2011 New ones appearing all the time Poisoning scholarly open-access publishing Low barrier to startup Hard to differentiate predatory and legitimate journals

11 HOW WILL THE PREDATORY PUBLISHERS GET YOUR MONEY? They fool people into thinking they are legitimate They don’t add value to research like traditional publishers do They work for the authors, not the readers Euro-Journals has disappeared as have others They tell lies They spam

12 CRITERIA FOR DETERMINING PREDATORY PUBLISHERS

13 PROBLEMS THAT PREDATORY PUBLISHING CAUSES FOR SCIENCE AND SOCIETY 1.Corruption of the gold open-access model and the staining of open-access in general 2.Possibly has increased the occurrence of research misconduct 3.Effect on the press, law, clinical medicine, public policy

14 PROBLEMS THAT PREDATORY PUBLISHING CAUSES FOR SCIENCE AND SOCIETY (Cont.) 4.Most predatory publishers don’t know about digital preservation 5.Author-centric rather than reader-centric 6.Gold OA favors hard sciences; may hurt arts, humanities fields 7.Scam conferences 8.Model does not work well for some scholarly societies

15 PROBLEMS THAT PREDATORY PUBLISHING CAUSES FOR SCIENCE AND SOCIETY (Cont.) 9.Spam 10.Predatory journals threaten demarcation 11.Publishing in a predatory journal may stain your tenure dossier 12.Will increase “managerialism” and academic politics

16 LIBRARY DATABASES AND PREDATORY JOURNALS Metadata packages from vendors Abstracting and indexing services

17 IMPLICATIONS FOR ACADEMIC LIBRARIANS OA is changing some librarians’ jobs Opportunity to show academic librarians’ value “Can you recommend a journal?”

18 OTHER POINTS A."Though both Beall and [Bill] Cohen compare the predatory publishers to vanity presses, the analogy goes only so far. A literary vanity press is a harmless indulgence; the ones on Beall’s list introduce unvetted claims into the scientific record on a scale that does nontrivial damage to its credibility.“ Millard, W.B. (2013). Some research wants to be free, some follows the money: Bogus journals complicate the open access movement. Annals of emergency medicine 62(2), A14-A20.

19 OTHER POINTS B.Google Scholar does not screen for quality C.The validation function of traditional journals D.Hybrid journals E.Inability to distinguish pseudo-science and authentic science F.Promoting OA without warning about predatory publishers

20 OTHER POINTS G.Have you cited any predatory journals H.Emergence of bogus metrics

21 OTHER POINTS I.How do we stop predatory publishers? J.Are larger publishers better able to add value to scholarship? K.Profit margins and salaries L.Legal threats against me M.Recent article in Science magazine

22 Thanks ! jeffrey.beall@ucdenver.edu


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