From: Bill Cohen <[log in to unmask]> Date: Thu, 17 Oct 2013 19:46:01 -0400 The blog post cited by Kevin also mentions the financial incentive for some indexing services to include as many journals as possible because it is financially advantageous to do so. That's right on the money. Without naming names, I can attest from experience that some journal indexing services do indeed take "everything you give them." Others are excruciatingly careful. Inclusion in some indexing services is like a book being listed in "Books in Print." I'm not sure what academic value can be construed from such incluson. Academics and librarians also ought to look out for journals (of all types) that list resources like "Ulrich's" as if they were indexing or abstracting services. It's just sloppy. More astutely designed journals clearly describe these reference tools separately under the A&I section as distinct bibliographic resources in which they are just listed. Bill Cohen, Founding Publisher The Haworth Press On 10/17/13 6:00 PM, LIBLICENSE wrote: From: "Beall, Jeffrey" <[log in to unmask]> Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 19:08:59 -0600 Kevin's right; excellent research can indeed appear in predatory journals; I have observed this. Predatory publishers do their best to appear legitimate, and they do everything they can to fool honest researchers into submitting papers to their journals. Sometimes they are successful, and a good researcher submits a novel and interesting paper to them, which they accept and publish. Predatory publishers don't discriminate; they want bad papers and good ones, as long as they can collect the APC. Jeffrey Beall, MA, MSLS, Associate Professor Scholarly Initiatives Librarian Auraria Library University of Colorado Denver Denver, Colo. 80204 USA [log in to unmask] -----Original Message----- From: Kevin Smith <[log in to unmask]> Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 12:40:49 +0000 Surely it is a massive and unjustified leap to go from saying that a journal accepted Bohannon's bogus paper to calling that entire journal bogus or suggesting that none of the contents of any of these journals could have value. I have been looking at and considering the Journal of Natural Pharmaceuticals. A quick look at PubMed and PubMed Central suggest that neither index includes that journal, which was the one Bohannon focused on in the beginning of his expose. But as I point out in this blog post --http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/2013/10/10/the-big-picture-about-peer-review/ -- two major indexes for general academic research, one from Gale and one from EBSCO, do include it. And we simply have no basis for concluding that every article published in that journal is compromised by the apparent fact that Bohannon's article was accepted. The web site Retraction Watch lists a recent retraction of an article that was published in Stem Cells and Development, a journal published by Mary Ann Liebert which I am confident is indexed in PubMed and PubMed Central. But surely not every article published in that journal is tainted by the one retraction? I am fascinated by some of the cultural assumptions at work in this discussion. When the open access community gathered in Stellenbosch last year for the Berlin 10 Conference, one of the themes we heard repeatedly was that research done in Africa by Africans about African issues was unavailable to the people of Africa because it was published in Western/Northern journals that were unaffordable for African universities. The new business models of open access offer opportunities to resolve that problem, but they clearly need to develop and work out their problems, just as subscription-based journal publishing did several centuries ago. But instead we see carefully orchestrated and "cooked" sting operations like Bohannon's (who pretended that his article was written by an African) designed to undermine those journals before they can get well-established. It is ironic that Bohannon controlled for the possibility that his "native English" might give the game away (what an assumption!) but not for the possibility that subscription-based journals in the developed world might also have accepted his paper. There is an interesting discussion to be had about what exactly peer-review can really tell us and how we might resolve the bias in current academic publishing for well-capitalized operations in the developed world, with their apparent desire to slay all challengers to their dominance. There is lots to say. But one thing we cannot say is that Bohannon's journalistic sting operation has shown that all of the research published in all the journals he targets is bogus. Kevin L. Smith, M.L.S., J.D. Director, Copyright and Scholarly Communication Duke University Libraries Durham, NC 27708 [log in to unmask]