Predatory publishing is an exploitative academic publishing business model that involves charging publication fees to authors without providing the editorial and publishing services associated with legitimate journals.
Created by the University of Manitoba Libraries
Created by the University of Manitoba Libraries
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Reposting content created by Judit Ward, Rutgers University Library. Link to the original LibGuide can be found here. Permission to repost has been granted by Ms. Ward.
Flattering email to invite you to submit an article or serve on the editorial board of a "scholarly" journal
Journal title
Website with information on the journal, editorial board, and publisher
Metrics and indexing
Article processing and peer review
Negative reputation
The Zucker School of Medicine/Northwell Health librarians conduct literature searches using reputable online databases, yet increasingly, a very small percentage of articles from predatory journals may appear via search results in databases such as PubMed and Scopus. PubMed and other databases index quality journals that pass a standardized review process. However, citations from PubMed Central (PMC), PubMed’s collection of free or open access journals, are also discoverable in results using PubMed. A small number of these search results may come from journals that could be considered “predatory.”
To learn more, read this February 2021 article from Nature. Northwell Link / ZSOM Link
Or review these slides for more information: Northwell Link / ZSOM Link
Or visit the new Medline website to learn more about Medline journals (click on the "About" tab): Medline Website
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