Questionable publications have been accused of "greedy" practices; however, their influence on academia has not been gauged. Here, we probe the impact of questionable publications through a systematic and comprehensive analysis with various participants from academia and compare the results with those of their unaccused counterparts using billions of citation records, including liaisons, e.g., journals and publishers, and prosumers, e.g., authors. The analysis reveals that questionable publications embellished their citation scores by attributing publisher-level self-citations to their journals while also controlling the journal-level self-citations to circumvent the evaluation of journal-indexing services. This approach makes it difficult to detect malpractice by conventional journal-level metrics. We propose journal-publisher-hybrid metric that help detect malpractice. We also demonstrate that the questionable publications had a weaker disruptiveness and influence than their counterparts. This indicates the negative effect of suspicious publishers in the academia. The findings provide a basis for actionable policy making against questionable publications.
翻译:有疑问的出版物被指责为“贪婪”做法;然而,这些出版物对学术界的影响没有得到衡量。在这里,我们通过与学术界各参与者进行系统和全面的分析,调查有疑问的出版物的影响,并使用数十亿份引证记录,包括联络,例如杂志和出版商,以及作者等代理等,将结果与非被告同行的结果进行比较。分析表明,有疑问的出版物通过将出版商一级的自我引证归属于其期刊,同时控制日记一级的自引用,以规避对期刊索引服务的评价,从而充实了它们的引证评分。这一方法使得难以发现常规日记级指标的渎职行为。我们建议采用有助于发现渎职行为的杂志-出版商-杂质衡量标准。我们还表明,有疑问的出版物的干扰力和影响比其同行要弱。这表明,有嫌疑的出版商在学术界的负面作用。调查结果为针对有争议的出版物制定可采取行动的政策提供了依据。