"I'd like to think I'd be able to spot one if I saw one": How science journalists navigate predatory journals

Alice Fleerackers, Laura L Moorhead, Juan Pablo Alperin
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Abstract

Predatory journals--or journals that prioritize profits over editorial and publication best practices--are becoming more common, raising concerns about the integrity of the scholarly record. Such journals also pose a threat for the integrity of science journalism, as journalists may unwillingly report on low quality or even highly flawed studies published in these venues. This study sheds light on how journalists navigate this challenging publishing landscape through a qualitative analysis of interviews with 23 health, science, and environmental journalists about their perceptions of predatory journals and strategies for ensuring the journals they report on are trustworthy. We find that journalists have relatively limited awareness and/or concern about predatory journals. Much of this attitude is due to confidence in their established practices for avoiding problematic research, which largely centre on perceptions of journal prestige, reputation, and familiarity, as well as writing quality and professionalism. Most express limited awareness of how their trust heuristics may discourage them from reporting on smaller, newer, and open access journals, especially those based in the Global South. We discuss implications for the accuracy and diversity of the science news that reaches the public.
"我想,如果我看到一个人,我就能认出他来":科学记者如何驾驭掠夺性期刊
掠夺性期刊--或将利润置于编辑和出版最佳实践之上的期刊--越来越常见,引发了人们对学术记录完整性的担忧。这类期刊也对科学新闻的诚信构成了威胁,因为记者可能不愿意报道在这些刊物上发表的低质量甚至漏洞百出的研究。本研究通过对 23 位健康、科学和环境新闻记者的访谈进行定性分析,了解他们对掠夺性期刊的看法以及确保他们报道的期刊值得信赖的策略,从而揭示新闻记者如何驾驭这一充满挑战的出版环境。我们发现,记者对掠夺性期刊的认识和/或关注相对有限。他们之所以持这种态度,很大程度上是因为对自己避免有问题研究的既定做法充满信心,这些做法主要集中在对期刊声望、声誉、熟悉程度以及写作质量和专业性的看法上。大多数人对他们的信任启发法可能阻碍他们报道较小、较新和开放存取期刊,尤其是全球南部期刊的认识有限。我们将讨论这对公众科学新闻的准确性和多样性的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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