articleBMC MedicineOct 1, 2015GOLD OA

‘Predatory’ open access: a longitudinal study of article volumes and market characteristics

Hanken School of Economics

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

A negative consequence of the rapid growth of scholarly open access publishing funded by article processing charges is the emergence of publishers and journals with highly questionable marketing and peer review practices. These so-called predatory publishers are causing unfounded negative publicity for open access publishing in general. Reports about this branch of e-business have so far mainly concentrated on exposing lacking peer review and scandals involving publishers and journals. There is a lack of comprehensive studies about several aspects of this phenomenon, including extent and regional distribution.

Methods

After an initial scan of all predatory publishers and journals included in the so-called Beall's list, a sample of 613 journals was constructed using a stratified sampling method from the total of over 11,000 journals identified. Information about the subject field, country of publisher, article processing charge and article volumes published between 2010 and 2014 were manually collected from the journal websites. For a subset of journals, individual articles were sampled in order to study the country affiliation of authors and the publication delays.

Citation impact

813
total citations
FWCI
68.66
Percentile
100%
References
30
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Publishing
  • Publicity
  • Subject (documents)
  • Order (exchange)
  • Library science
  • Medicine
  • Advertising
  • Marketing
No related works found for this paper.