Predatory journals - what are they and how to avoid
Interesting paper from 2023
Cook F, Govender R, Brennan PA. Greetings from your predatory journal! What they are, why they are a problem, how to spot and avoid them. British journal of oral and maxillofacial surgery. 2023 Apr 1;61(3):245-7. Keywords: Predatory journal, Open access, Publishing ethics, Peer review, Scholarly communication, Transparency
2025-01-21This paper explains what predatory journals are, their dodgy practices, impact on academic integrity, and how to identify and avoid them.
ACCESS https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bjoms.2023.02.005
Abstract
Predatory publishers, also known as counterfeit, deceptive, or fraudulent, are organisations that exploit the open-access scholarly model by charging hefty article processing charges (APCs), often without the scientific rigour and ethical processes offered by legitimate journals. Their rising prevalence is of concern to the scientific community, as the consequences of falling victim to them can negatively impact academic integrity and reputation, and render an author’s work worthless and untrustworthy. Common characteristics include inappropriate marketing and misrepresentation of services by targeting individuals with solicitation emails, inadequate peer-review processes, lack of editorial services and transparency about APCs, and false claims about citation metrics and indexing that cannot be verified. Given the infiltration of predatory publishers, authors are advised to proceed with caution when receiving solicitation emails and if in doubt, to follow the Think, Check, Submit checklist.