Fake scientific papers are alarmingly common [View all]
When neuropsychologist Bernhard Sabel put his new fake-paper detector to work, he was shocked by what it found. After screening some 5000 papers, he estimates up to 34% of neuroscience papers published in 2020 were likely made up or plagiarized; in medicine, the figure was 24%. Both numbers, which he and colleagues report in a medRxiv preprint posted on 8 May, are well above levels they calculated for 2010and far larger than the 2% baseline estimated in a 2022 publishers group report.
It is just too hard to believe at first, says Sabel of Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg and editor-in-chief of Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience. Its as if somebody tells you 30% of what you eat is toxic.
His findings underscore what was widely suspected: Journals are awash in a rising tide of scientific manuscripts from paper millssecretive businesses that allow researchers to pad their publication records by paying for fake papers or undeserved authorship. Paper mills have made a fortune by basically attacking a system that has had no idea how to cope with this stuff, says Dorothy Bishop, a University of Oxford psychologist who studies fraudulent publishing practices. A 2 May announcement from the publisher Hindawi underlined the threat: It shut down four of its journals it found were heavily compromised by articles from paper mills.
https://www.science.org/content/article/fake-scientific-papers-are-alarmingly-common