2021
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-021-04121-8
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Citation patterns between impact-factor and questionable journals

Abstract: One of the most fundamental issues in academia today is understanding the differences between legitimate and questionable publishing. While decision-makers and managers consider journals indexed in popular citation indexes such as Web of Science or Scopus as legitimate, they use two lists of questionable journals (Beall’s and Cabell’s), one of which has not been updated for a few years, to identify the so-called predatory journals. The main aim of our study is to reveal the contribution of the journals accepte… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Accordingly, impact factor journal articles have been considered "quality" and "legitimate" articles, while articles published in predatory journals were deemed worthless. Interestingly, however, in a pioneering study (Kulczycki, Hołowiecki, Taşkın and Krawczyk, 2021b), we found a strong citation relationship between these "valuable" and "worthless" journals. Although the number of citations is accepted as an indicator of quality by decision-makers, the citations made in journals deemed to be of good quality to journals whose poor quality is accepted by the majority deserve a detailed examination.…”
Section: A Need To Go Beyond Counting: Content-based Citation Analysismentioning
confidence: 74%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Accordingly, impact factor journal articles have been considered "quality" and "legitimate" articles, while articles published in predatory journals were deemed worthless. Interestingly, however, in a pioneering study (Kulczycki, Hołowiecki, Taşkın and Krawczyk, 2021b), we found a strong citation relationship between these "valuable" and "worthless" journals. Although the number of citations is accepted as an indicator of quality by decision-makers, the citations made in journals deemed to be of good quality to journals whose poor quality is accepted by the majority deserve a detailed examination.…”
Section: A Need To Go Beyond Counting: Content-based Citation Analysismentioning
confidence: 74%
“…The main dataset was created using the data of two of our previous papers, "Do impact factor journals make blacklisted journals visible? A systematic citation study" (Kulczycki, Holowiecki, Taşkın & Krawczyk, 2021a) and "Citation patterns between impact factor and questionable journals" (Kulczycki, Hołowiecki, Taşkın & Krawczyk, 2021b). We collected data on 65 questionable social sciences journals and their article metadata.…”
Section: Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Unfortunately, a definitive solution to "predatory" publishing has not been found, in part because academia has not been able to clearly differentiate predatory from non-predatory entities, i.e., it has been unable to parse the gray zone, in some cases preferring to employ the term "questionable" to encompass both "bad-faith outlets from low-quality ones" (Kulczycki et al 2021). In part, this has been due to the creation of blacklists with insufficiently clear criteria, or the blacklisting or whitelisting of journals or publishers based on insufficiently robust criteria, or due to the failure to appreciate, and acknowledge, the existence of the wide gray zone of quality in academic standards and scholarly behavior in journals or publishers.…”
Section: Limitations and Future Needsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the same level of JSC, the journals which got higher JIFs will have lower JSC rates in terms of total citations ( Gorski et al., 2021 ). Recent emerging studies indicated the relations between citation and self-citation were usually diversified dependent on what disciplines and/or journals were concerned ( Krauss, 2007 ; Gazni and Didegah, 2021 ; Jain et al., 2021 ; Jamalnia and Shokrpour, 2021 ; Kulczycki et al., 2021 ; Urlings et al., 2021 ; Sanfilippo et al., 2021 ). In addition, longitudinal studies in medical literature showed a decline in the JSC rate in terms of total citations ( Delli and Livas, 2018 ; Delli et al., 2020 ), the accustomed indicator of JSC at present.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%