
John Antonakis is psychologist by training, but his research has run the gamut from showing kids accurately predict election outcomes just by looking at candidates’ faces to teaching charisma to people in leadership positions. Now, as the newly appointed editor of The Leadership Quarterly, he’s tackling problems in academic publishing. But his approach is somewhat unique – he sees these problems as diseases (ie, “significosis”) that threaten the well-being of the academic literature. In a new paper, he’s calling on the efforts of researchers, editors, and funders to prevent, diagnose, and treat the five diseases of academic publishing.
Retraction Watch: What prompted you to think about problems in science publishing in terms of diseases?
Continue reading Got “significosis?” Here are the five diseases of academic publishing


Neurology has partially retracted a 2016 paper, replacing a figure and removing the author who contributed it 


A researcher in Greece has issued extensive — what we sometimes call “
After an international group of physicists agreed that the findings of their 2015 paper were in doubt, they simply couldn’t agree on how to explain what went wrong. Apparently tired of waiting, the journal retracted the paper anyway.
The notices keep coming for diabetes researcher