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How the World is Adapting to Preprints

How the World is Adapting to Preprints

Preprint servers have become an indispensable part of scholarly publishing. The next step is learning how to embrace them.

A New Artificial Intelligence Makes Mistakes - On Purpose

A New Artificial Intelligence Makes Mistakes - On Purpose

A chess program that learns from human error might be better at working with people or negotiating with them.

'Politics Was Always in the Room.' WHO Mission Chief Reflects on China Trip Seeking COVID-19's Origin

'Politics Was Always in the Room.' WHO Mission Chief Reflects on China Trip Seeking COVID-19's Origin

WHO plans to release a summary report of the mission’s finding as early as this week; a full report will come later.

ELife Collaborates with Novel Coronavirus Research Compendium on Manuscript Curation and Review

ELife Collaborates with Novel Coronavirus Research Compendium on Manuscript Curation and Review

The two initiatives have come together in their shared objective to help scientists and the public navigate the high volume of important new research.

'A Million Euro-babies': EU Fetes 30 Years of Student Exchanges

'A Million Euro-babies': EU Fetes 30 Years of Student Exchanges

The European Union celebrated 30 years of its Erasmus student exchange scheme on Tuesday, with its chief executive boasting the program had fostered cross-border romances that may have borne a million children.

Pandemic Hit Academic Mothers Especially Hard, New Data Confirm

Pandemic Hit Academic Mothers Especially Hard, New Data Confirm

Policy changes are needed to aid female scientists, emphasized by new data from a global survey of 20,000 Ph.D. holders.

How Has the Pandemic Influenced Public Attitudes Toward Science?

How Has the Pandemic Influenced Public Attitudes Toward Science?

Join Knowable Magazine for a conversation about public attitudes to science, how they have changed in the past year, and the role that group identities play in shaping people's views.

Physicists Discuss Threats Facing Departments and How Faculty Can Respond

Physicists Discuss Threats Facing Departments and How Faculty Can Respond

Nearly half of all physics chairs report their department is under some level of threat, ranging from closure to budget cutbacks. Physicists offer perspectives on how faculty can respond proactively.

MIT Libraries Develop Innovative Open Access Agreements with PLOS

MIT Libraries Develop Innovative Open Access Agreements with PLOS

The MIT Libraries has negotiated two new open-access publishing agreements with the nonprofit publisher Public Library of Science (PLOS) that allow all MIT authors to publish in all PLOS titles with no publishing fees.

Transparency to Hybrid Open Access Through Publisher-provided Metadata

Transparency to Hybrid Open Access Through Publisher-provided Metadata

This study addresses the lack of transparency by leveraging Elsevier article metadata and provides the first publisher-level study of hybrid OA uptake and invoicing.

Scientists Warn over Misuse of Climate Models in Financial Markets

Scientists Warn over Misuse of Climate Models in Financial Markets

Misuse of climate models could pose a growing risk to financial markets by giving investors a false sense of certainty over how the physical impacts of climate change will play out.

Hundreds of 'predatory' Journals Indexed on Leading Scholarly Database

Hundreds of 'predatory' Journals Indexed on Leading Scholarly Database

Scopus has stopped adding content from most of the flagged titles, but the analysis highlights how poor-quality science is infiltrating literature.

Unequal Burden: How the COVID-19 Pandemic is Adding to Women's Workloads

Unequal Burden: How the COVID-19 Pandemic is Adding to Women's Workloads

A new report for UN Women shows that women have seen a larger increase in unpaid work than men due to COVID-19.

'Nepotistic Journals': a Survey of Biomedical Journals

'Nepotistic Journals': a Survey of Biomedical Journals

Context Convergent analyses in different disciplines support the use of the Percentage of Papers by the Most Prolific author (PPMP) as a red flag to identify journals that can be suspected of questionable editorial practices. We examined whether this index, complemented by the Gini index, could be useful for identifying cases of potential editorial bias, using a large sample of biomedical journals. Methods We extracted metadata for all biomedical journals referenced in the National Library of Medicine, with any attributed Broad Subject Terms, and at least 50 authored (i.e. by at least one author) articles between 2015 and 2019, identifying the most prolific author (i.e. the person who signed the most papers in each particular journal). We calculated the PPMP and the 2015-2019 Gini index for the distribution of articles across authors. When the relevant information was reported, we also computed the median publication lag (time between submission and acceptance) for articles authored by any of the most prolific authors and that for articles not authored by prolific authors. For outlier journals, defined as a PPMP or Gini index above the 95th percentile of their respective distributions, a random sample of 100 journals was selected and described in relation to status on the editorial board for the most prolific author. Results 5 468 journals that published 4 986 335 papers between 2015 and 2019 were analysed. The PPMP 95th percentile was 10.6% (median 2.9%). The Gini index 95th percentile was 0.355 (median 0.183). Correlation between the two indices was 0.35 (95CI 0.33 to 0.37). Information on publication lag was available for 2 743 journals. We found that 277 journals (10.2%) had a median time lag to publication for articles by the most prolific author(s) that was shorter than 3 weeks, versus 51 (1.9%) journals with articles not authored by prolific author(s). Among the random sample of outlier journals, 98 provided information about their editorial board. Among these 98, the most prolific author was part of the editorial board in 60 cases (61%), among whom 25 (26% of the 98) were editors-in-chief. Discussion In most journals publications are distributed across a large number of authors. Our results reveal a subset of journals where a few authors, often members of the editorial board, were responsible for a disproportionate number of publications. The papers by these authors were more likely to be accepted for publication within 3 weeks of their submission. To enhance trust in their practices, journals need to be transparent about their editorial and peer review practices.