A narrative review of the phenomenon of predatory journals to create awareness among researchers in veterinary medicine

Author:

Fadel Charbel1ORCID,Milanova Aneliya2ORCID,Suran Jelena3,Sitovs Andrejs45ORCID,Kim Tae Won6ORCID,Bello Abubakar7ORCID,Abay Solomon Mequanente8,Horst Stefanie9,Mileva Rositsa2ORCID,Amadori Michela10,Oster Ena11ORCID,Re Giovanni10,Abdul Kadir Arifah12ORCID,Gambino Graziana10,Vercelli Cristina10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterinary Sciences University of Pisa Pisa Italy

2. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Trakia University Stara Zagora Bulgaria

3. Apiotix Technologies Split Croatia

4. Department of Pharmacology Rīga Stradiņš University Riga Latvia

5. Laboratory of Finished Dosage Forms Rīga Stradiņš University Riga Latvia

6. College of Veterinary Medicine Chungnam National University Daejeon South Korea

7. Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences Wroclaw Poland

8. Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy Addis Ababa University Addis Ababa Ethiopia

9. Department of Population Health Sciences, Institute of Risk Assessment Sciences (IRAS), One Health Pharmacology Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

10. Department of Veterinary Sciences University of Torino Torino Italy

11. University of Zagreb Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Zagreb Croatia

12. Department of Veterinary Preclinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Universiti Putra Malaysia Serdang Selangor Malaysia

Abstract

AbstractIn recent years, especially since the COVID‐19 pandemic, the number of predatory journals has increased significantly. Predatory journals exploit the “open‐access model” by engaging in deceptive practices such as charging high publication fees without providing the expected quality and performing insufficient or no peer review. Such behaviors undermine the integrity of scientific research and can result in researchers having trouble identifying reputable publication opportunities, particularly early‐career researchers who struggle to understand and establish the correct criteria for publication in reputable journals. Publishing in journals that do not fully cover the criteria for scientific publication is also an ethical issue. This review aimed to describe the characteristics of predatory journals, differentiate between reliable and predatory journals, investigate the reasons that lead researchers to publish in predatory journals, evaluate the negative impact of predatory publications on the scientific community, and explore future perspectives. The authors also provide some considerations for researchers (particularly early‐career researchers) when selecting journals for publication, explaining the role of metrics, databases, and artificial intelligence in manuscript preparation, with a specific focus on and relevance to publication in veterinary medicine.

Publisher

Wiley

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