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Journal citation reports and the definition of a predatory journal: The case of the Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI) (Papers: M Ángeles Oviedo-García | August 2021)

Posted by Dr Gary Allen in Research Integrity on August 30, 2021
Keywords: Analysis, Journal, Research results

The Linked Original Item was Posted On August, 11 2021

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This open access paper published in August 2021 provides a good analysis of the impact of questionable publishers on the body of scientific knowledge.

Abstract
The extent to which predatory journals can harm scientific practice increases as the numbers of such journals expand, in so far as they undermine scientific integrity, quality, and credibility, especially if those journals leak into prestigious databases. Journal Citation Reports (JCRs), a reference for the assessment of researchers and for grant-making decisions, is used as a standard whitelist, in so far as the selectivity of a JCR-indexed journal adds a legitimacy of sorts to the articles that the journal publishes. The Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI) once included on Beall’s list of potential, possible or probable predatory scholarly open-access publishers, had 53 journals ranked in the 2018 JCRs annual report. These journals are analysed, not only to contrast the formal criteria for the identification of predatory journals, but taking a step further, their background is also analysed with regard to self-citations and the source of those self-citations in 2018 and 2019. The results showed that the self-citation rates increased and was very much higher than those of the leading journals in the JCR category. Besides, an increasingly high rate of citations from other MDPI-journals was observed. The formal criteria together with the analysis of the citation patterns of the 53 journals under analysis all singled them out as predatory journals. Hence, specific recommendations are given to researchers, educational institutions and prestigious databases advising them to review their working relations with those sorts of journals.

Ángeles Oviedo-García, M. (2021) Journal citation reports and the definition of a predatory journal: The case of the Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), Research Evaluation, 2021;, rvab020, https://doi.org/10.1093/reseval/rvab020
Publisher (Open Access): https://academic.oup.com/rev/advance-article/doi/10.1093/reseval/rvab020/6348133

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Journal citation reports and the definition of a predatory journal: The case of the Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Abstract. The extent to which predatory journals can harm scientific practice increases as the numbers of such journals expand, in so far as they undermine scie

Related Reading

Predatory publishing: A to Z elements | Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency

Predatory Journals – A one stop shop for resources – Centre for Journalology

Predatory Publishing in Scopus: Evidence on Cross‑country Differences (Papers: Vít Macháček & Martin Srholec | February 2021)

A qualitative content analysis of watchlists vs safelists: How do they address the issue of predatory publishing? (Papers: Amy Koerbera, et al | September 2020)

Demarcating Spectrums of Predatory Publishing: Economic and Institutional Sources of Academic Legitimacy (PrePrint Papers: Kyle Siler | June 2018)

Defining predatory journals and responding to the threat they pose: a modified Delphi consensus process (Papers: Samantha Cukier, et al | February 2020)

Predatory journals: no definition, no defence – Nature (Agnes Grudniewicz, et al | December 2019)

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Selecting a publisher: Essential resources for HDR candidates and early career researchers

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