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The week at Retraction Watch featured:
- Wiley paused Hindawi special issues amid quality problems, lost $9 million in revenue
- Article retracted when authors don’t pay publication fee
- Ob-gyn loses PhD after committee finds he made up research
- Journals dismiss claims that Harvard researcher’s work on race is ‘pseudoscience’
Our list of retracted or withdrawn COVID-19 papers is up to more than 300. There are more than 39,000 retractions in our database — which powers retraction alerts in EndNote, LibKey, Papers, and Zotero. And have you seen our leaderboard of authors with the most retractions lately — or our list of top 10 most highly cited retracted papers?
Here’s what was happening elsewhere (some of these items may be paywalled, metered access, or require free registration to read):
- “Is Economics Self-Correcting? Replications in the American Economic Review.”
- “20 years of ‘terror’ in the laboratory: the ‘abuse of power’ of a Pompeu Fabra professor against his researchers.”
- “Are self-citations a normal feature of knowledge accumulation?”
- “Article Processing Charges are a Heavy Burden for Middle-Income Countries.”
- “A tool for preprint to publication detection shows global inequities in scientific publication.”
- “Is writing a book chapter still a waste of time?”
- “Protecting research integrity: change or the same old ARIC [Australian Research Integrity Committee].”
- “Are female scientists underrepresented in self-retractions for honest error?” asks a new paper.
- “Research misconduct and questionable research practices form a continuum.”
- How “curing” misinformation can do more harm than good.
- “A sad day for science” as a journal publishes “a worthless corrigendum,” says Nina Steinkopf.
- A USC oncologist’s new book is filled with plagiarism, the Los Angeles Times finds. It’s being held from publication.
- “Deception Detection.”
- Jonathan Pruitt earns another retraction, this one from Nature. It joins 14 others.
- “Leading American medical journal continues to omit Black research,” say the authors of a recent analysis.
- “‘MTL knew’: Misconduct allegations independently corroborated in private correspondence to special committee.”
- A former medical school dean has another paper retracted. He’s up to seven.
- “Article retracted when authors don’t pay publication fee.”
- Two new journals seek to fill a neurodiversity gap in the autism literature.
- “I was wrong, says the Harvard professor. And that’s OK.”
- “Overall, 20% of respondents admitted sacrificing the quality of their publications for quantity, and 14% reported that funders interfered in their study design or reporting.”
- “Allegations of Scientific Misconduct Mount as Physicist Makes His Biggest Claim Yet.”
- March 14 event: Our Ivan Oransky on the ethics of reporting on scientific mistakes and misconduct
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Just a little topic: self-citations may be inevitable when you are a renowned economist by decades, but what about an early-stage economist who self-cites more than once its papers? I have some difficulties in not thinking of it as a practice intended to inflate its own impact…