Thanks to some
live tweeting by Anna Sharman (@sharmanedit), I've become aware that the 13th Conference of the European Association of Science Editors (EASE) is taking
place in Strasbourg this weekend.
The topic is
"Scientific integrity: editors on the front line", and the programme
acknowledges Elsevier, who presumably have contributed funding for the
conference.
It therefore
seems timely to give a brief update of developments following three blogposts I
wrote during February-March 2015, documenting some peculiar editorial behaviour
at four journals: Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders (RASD: Elsevier),
Research in Developmental Disabilities (RIDD: Elsevier), Developmental Neurorehabilitation
(DN: Informa Healthcare) and Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities
(JDPD: Springer).
To do the story
full justice, you need to read these blogposts, but in brief, blogpost 1
described how Johnny Matson, the then editor of both RASD and RIDD had
published numerous articles in his own journal, and engaged in frequent
self-citation, leading to his receiving a 'highly cited' badge from Thomson
Reuters. In the comments on that blogpost, another intriguing factor emerged,
which was Matson's tendency to accept papers with little or no review. This was
denied by Elsevier, despite clear evidence of very short acceptance lags that
were incompatible with review.
Blogpost 2 was
prompted by Matson defending himself against accusations of self-citation by
pointing out that he published in journals that he did not edit. I checked
this out and found he had numerous papers in two other journals: DN and JDPD, and that the median lag between
a paper of his being submitted and accepted in DN was one day. (JDPD does not provide
data on publication lags). I therefore looked at the editors of those journals,
and found that they themselves were publishing remarkable numbers of papers in RASD and
RIDD, again with extremely short publication lags. A trio of editors and editorial
board members (Jeff Sigafoos, Giulio Lancioni and Mark O'Reilly), co-authored no less than 140 papers in RASD and RIDD between
2010 and 2014, typically with acceptance times of less than 2 weeks. Some of
the papers in RIDD were not even in the topic area of developmental
disabilities, but covered neurological conditions acquired in adulthood.
In blogpost 3, I
turned the focus on to the publisher of RASD and RIDD, Elsevier, to query why
they had not done anything about such irregular editorial practices. I did a
further analysis of publication lags in RIDD, showing that they had dropped
precipitately between 2008 and 2012, and that there was a small band of authors
whose prolific papers were published there at amazing speed. I provided all the
statistical data to support my case, including interactive spreadsheets that
made it easy to determine which editors and authors had been benefiting from
the slack editorial standards at these journals.
There was some
interesting fall-out from all of this. The second blogpost drew fire from
supporters of the editors I had "outed", accusing me of bad behaviour
and threatening to complain to my university. Since everything I had said was
backed by evidence, this did not concern me. I received heartfelt messages of support from people who were appalled that a particular approach to autism intervention had been promoted by this group of editors, who were in effect using their status to gain the veneer of scientific credibility for work which was not in fact peer-reviewed. I was also contacted by several
academics telling me that everyone knew this had been going on for years, but nobody had done anything; this level of passivity was surprising given that many were angry that authors had reaped benefits from their staggeringly high publication
rate, while those who were outside the charmed circle were left behind. I was urged to go further and raise my concerns with the universities
employing those who were capitalising on, or engaging in, lax editorial
behaviour. I do, however, have an extremely demanding job and I hoped that I had
done enough by shining a light on dubious practices, and providing the full
datasets that provided evidence. However, I now wonder if I should have been more pro-active.
I wrote to
express my concerns to publishers of all four journals, and had my
correspondence acknowledged. But then? Well, not a lot.
It's clear that
Elsevier has taken some action. Indeed, my first blogpost was prompted by
Michelle Dawson noting on Twitter that the editorial boards of RASD and RIDD
had mysteriously disappeared from the online journals. She had previously noted
Matson's pattern of mega-self-citation, and I had written directly to him,
with copy to the publisher, some months previously to express concern, when I realised that I was
listed as a member of the editorial board of RASD. Elsevier did not acknowledge
my letter, but it is possible that the changes to the editorial boards that they had
started were linked to my concerns.
The first direct
response I had from Elsevier was some weeks after my final blogpost, when they
explained that they were looking into the situation regarding unreviewed
papers, but that this was a huge job and would take a long time. They were
presumably disinclined to rely on the files that I had deposited on Open
Science Framework, which show the identity and submission and acceptance data
for every paper in RASD and RIDD. They
did appoint new editors and a small group of associate editors for both
journals, all with good track records for integrity.
I have heard on
the grapevine that they are now evaluating articles published in those journals
that have been identified as not having undergone peer review; some of those approached to do these
evaluations have mentioned this to me. It's rather unclear how this is going to
work, given that, across the two journals, there are nearly 1000 papers where
the available data indicate a lag from receipt to acceptance of under 2 weeks.
I guess we should be glad that at least the publisher is taking some action,
albeit at a snail's pace, but I am dubious as to whether there will be any retractions.
Meanwhile,
Developmental Neurorehabilitation changed publisher around the time I was
writing, and is now under the care of Taylor and Francis. I wrote to the publisher
explaining my concerns and received a polite reply, but then heard no more. I
note that the Editor in Chief is now Wendy Machalicek, who previously co-edited
the journal with Russell Lang. Lang's doctoral advisor was Mark O'Reilly,
editor of JDPD, and one of the prolific trio who featured in blogpost 2. Lang
himself co-authored 24 papers in RASD and 13 in RIDD, and 35 of these 39 papers
were accepted within 2 weeks of receipt. Machalicek has published 11 papers in
RASD and 5 in RIDD, and 12 of these 16 papers were accepted within 2 weeks of
receipt. She also did her doctorate in
O'Reilly's department, and several of her papers are co-authored with him. In an editorial last year, Lang and
Machalicek announced changes to the journal, some of which seem to be
prompted by a desire to make the reviewing process more rigorous under the new
publisher. However, one change is of particular interest: the scope of the
journal will be broadened to consider "developmental disability from a
lifespan perspective; wherein, it is acknowledged that development occurs
throughout a person's life and a range of injuries, diseases and other
impairments can cause delayed or abnormal development at any stage of
life." That will be good news for Giulio Lancioni, who was previously
publishing papers on coma patients, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and
Alzheimer's disease in RIDD. He and his collaborators – Jeff Sigafoos, Mark
O'Reilly, as well as Russell Lang and Johnny Matson – are all current members
of the editorial board of the journal.
It seems to be
business as usual at the Springer title, Journal of Developmental and Physical
Disabilities. Mark O'Reilly is still the editor, with Lang and Sigafoos as
associate editors; Lancioni, Machalicek and Matson are all on the editorial
board. Springer's willingness to turn a blind eye to editors playing the system becomes clear when
one sees that a recent title, "Review Journal of Autism and Developmental
Disorders" has as Editor-in-Chief no less a personage than Johnny Matson.
And, surprise, surprise, the editorial board includes Lang, Sigafoos and
Lancioni.
One of the
overarching problems I uncovered when navigating my way around this situation
was that there is no effective route for a whistleblower who has uncovered
evidence of dubious behaviour by editors. Elsevier has developed a Publishing Ethics Resource Kit but
it is designed to help editors dealing with ethical issues that arise with
authors and reviewers. The general advice if you encounter an ethical problem
is to contact the editor. The Committee on Publication Ethics also issues
guidance, but it is an advisory body with no powers. One would hope that
publishers would act with integrity when a serious problem with an editor is
revealed, but if my experience is anything to go by, they are extremely
reluctant to act and will weave very large carpets to brush the problems under.
Dependence on publication lag to detect possible malfeasance has an obvious downside -- the perpetrators will simply create an artificial lag between submission and acceptance, even though no legitimate peer review occurs in that period.
ReplyDeleteThe only real solution I can see is an open reviewing process, which identifies the reviewers. Some journals are now doing this (primarily open access journals, I believe), and it ought to become standard practice. Yes, I know there are downsides, but are they worse than the abuses you are documenting?
Bottom line, of course, is that science would be better off if the entire publication process were fully open and transparent, and in fact, if open access were standard.
I am already for over a year in contact with mainstream publisher Taylor & Francis about a faulty paper which is loaded with fabricated data (see https://pubpeer.com/publications/CBDA623DED06FB48B659B631BA69E7 ). My experiences with Taylor & Francis about this faulty paper are until now fully in line with your view "they are extremely reluctant to act".
ReplyDeleteThe Associate Editor of the journal in question, Dr Adrian C. Pont, is affilated to the University Museum of Natural History, Oxford, UK. This museum is part of Oxford Univerisity. Dr. Pont was unwilling to help me. I have therefore informed the Registrar of your university, professor Ewan McKendrick, about the behaviour of Dr. Pont.
I received on 20 August 2015 an e-mail from professor Ewan McKendrick. Professor Mc.Kendrik stated in this e-mail:
* "acting as an editor of an academic journal does not constitute research."
* "acting as an editor of an academic journal is not part of an academic’s responsibilities."
I have asked professor McKendrick to provide me with some solid references (of papers in peer-reviewed journals) which support his statement, on behalf of your university, that "acting as an editor of an academic journal does not constitute research." I have provided professor McKendrick references with opposite views. These references include for example the report "Responsible Research Data Management and the prevention of scientific misconduct". This report was published by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2012 ( https://www.knaw.nl/nl/actueel/publicaties/zorgvuldig-en-integer-omgaan-met-wetenschappelijke-onderzoeksgegevens and
https://www.knaw.nl/nl/actueel/publicaties/responsible-research-data-management-and-the-prevention-of-scientific-misconduct?set_language=en ).
There was until now, 13 June 2016, no response.
I have also contacted in March 2016 Dr. Iveta Simera, affilated to Oxford University and one of the Editors-in-Chief of the new journal 'Research Integrity and Peer Review' (publisher Biomed Central) for views and references about the statement of professor McKendrick. I have sent Dr. Simera several reminders. I have until now only received several auto-replies.
I would be pleased if a reader of this comment is able to provide me with (a bunch of) solid references which can support the statements of professor McKendrick.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteAnd the wicked shall flourish as the green bay tree...
ReplyDeleteIt is very worrying to hear that Dorothy Bishop's excellent and incontrovertible research has been disregarded by all involved. Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
Maybe Thomson Reuters could be convinced to reconsider indexing these problematic journals. That should exert quite a bit of pressure on them...
ReplyDeleteWhen I tried to reveal the extensive self-plagiarism of the Editor-in-Chief of Elsevier's Scientia Horticulturae, Dr. Samir C. Debnath, and to reveal the situation to the pertinent Canadian authorities, I was banned from the journal following a smear campaign in an attempt to silence me. Dr. Debnath resigned or was sacked on December 31, 2015 from his position as EIC. Now, 6 months later, he has been reelevated to the post of EIC once again. This is just the tip of the ice-berg of corruption, cronyism and academic perversion in the world's top ranking horticultural journal. But the problem extends itself to other main publishers. It seems like the only route to ousting corrupt academics with incredibly powerful networks is through public shaming.
ReplyDeleteRelevant web-sites:
https://www.pubpeer.com/search?q=debnath&sessionid=EFEE2747CEA186BA9D89
https://www.researchgate.net/post/When_should_scientists_be_banned_by_journals_and_publishers
http://retractionwatch.com/2014/04/10/following-personal-attacks-and-threats-elsevier-plant-journal-makes-author-persona-non-grata/
It's great to see these kinds of ethical issues receiving more attention. As a professional who works with people diagnosed with autism and other developmental disabilities, I directly felt the effects of such faulty research. Unfortunately, my concerns have always fallen on deaf ears. Confusion and fruitless outcomes seem to keep the profit wheels turning I guess.
ReplyDelete