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Affordable AI-powered writing software offers some hope to scholars unfairly criticised for their imperfect English, but more radical change is required, says Natalia Kucirkova
As university libraries invest heavily in digital resources, Caroline Ball explains why physical books are still vital for research, teaching and the preservation of knowledge
As annual US budget process approaches its crescendo, Republicans try to block order that forbids paywalls on federally funded findings
By distributing both credit and blame where it is due, initiatives such as CRediT can help deter research fraud, says Paul Ayris
Departing editors accept that there’s ‘no shortage of academics’ to replace them as they call for ‘concerted action’
Publishers of big journals ramp up efforts to ensure more transparency over what material has been fed into the likes of ChatGPT
Editorial board of Design Studies quits alongside long-standing editor-in-chief, who blamed publisher’s ‘deeply exploitative’ approach to running the title
Commitments to flip individual journals have not proved to be the game changer that Springer Nature had hoped, says Steven Inchcoombe
All 44 members of Critical Public Health board resign over Taylor & Francis’ article processing charges and alleged push for minimum paper counts
Studying flocks of starlings helped Giorgio Parisi crack some of physics’ deepest mysteries. The Nobelist talks to Matthew Reisz about his unconventional methods, missed eureka moments and being Italy’s most in-demand scientist
Publisher’s replacement of editor-in-chief comes as it pushes for seven-fold increase in acceptances
Aaron Ciechanover criticises profits of Nature publisher and backs mega-journal model
Surge in downloads ‘reflects industry failure’ to meet sector’s needs amid rising demand for papers, researchers say
Citations are growing at a faster pace in Asia than the rest of the world, according to THE rankings data
ChatGPT’s ability to churn out mediocre papers should lead us to reappraise how research is carried out, reported and evaluated, says Martyn Hammersley
Periodicals ejected from scheme after failing to meet open access publishing targets
Journals’ predilection for data availability statements makes little difference to readers’ chances of getting their hands on the data
Creating new publications for disaffected editors could catalyse a sector-wide rethink on publishing norms, say experts
With just 50 sub-Saharan journals listed in Scopus, it’s time to consider how citation indexes are holding back scholarly publishing in Africa, argue David Mills and Natasha Robinson
Even journals that have removed paywalls retain their bias towards certain types of author – and their prejudice against others, says Katie Stripe
As anger mounts over cost of open access deals, moves to finance diamond journals and expand state-run digital platforms have divided opinion
Offering payment has risks, but it could expand the pool of willing reviewers beyond those on permanent academic salaries, says Duncan Money
Even academics, never mind practitioners, will rarely read beyond an underwhelming and uninformative summary, says Maia Chankseliani
Anger over high cost of publishing in Nature and other titles as UK universities sign up for three-year agreement
Immediate review of outputs by a REF reviewer could be more efficient, transparent, informative and, above all, fair, says Martin Lang
Editorial team at NeuroImage will work with MIT Press to establish new non-profit journal
Bibliographic databases’ default ‘sort by relevance’ listings perpetuate bias towards white, Western men, says Katy Jordan
Publishers, libraries and funders must do what they can to ensure that no one is priced out of open-access publishing, says Mandy Hill
Publishing giant announces list of more than 100 nations where open access charges will not apply
We can’t discourage scientific opportunism without providing information about which publishers to avoid, says Natalia Letki
Further security service-directed restrictions could deal ‘serious blow’ to West’s China studies and isolate Chinese academics
Many such journals are on government-approved lists and indexed in mainstream bibliographic databases, says Emanuel Kulczycki
Clarivate’s delisting of academic publications will send a message that research integrity is paramount, says campaigner
Linking salary rises to publication record has fuelled research ethics violations, with early career academics struggling the most
After claims of image manipulation in papers by Marc Tessier-Lavigne, neuroscientist promises vindication amid signs of faculty unease
Analysis shows Swiss publisher MDPI set up almost 56,000 special issues with a closing date in 2023
Students often have no choice but to include professors who have had no input into papers as co-authors, says Roohola Ramezani
University groups say the proposed agreement with the German-British publisher ‘still does not meet the needs of the sector and our members’
‘Exponential growth’ in past few years sees China gain on the US in race to be the leading nation in global research output
Podcast appearances, op-eds and public lectures should all count in hiring and tenure decisions, according to new, broader definition of scholarship
Jointly run open access publisher will offer lower cost route for Scottish researchers seeking to comply with new UKRI rules on monographs
Leading scientists ‘appalled’ to find sham papers have been attributed to them say case against UK-registered publishers is overdue
Rights retention agreement aims to end ‘unhelpful’ model under which universities ‘give IP to publishers and buy access to it in perpetuity’, says Manchester librarian
Some editors publish most of their papers in their own titles, study finds
Scientific publisher hopes new credit scheme will reward and incentivise peer review
Identifying deception often requires analysis of patterns across large collections of articles. Publishers must work together, says David McDade
Researchers analysed data from 45 million papers and 4 million patents over six decades, finding less disruption and more consolidation
Growth of chapters seen in the 1990s has tailed off, and they are increasingly pushed towards the back
For academics trained to plough a narrow, deep, heavily footnoted field, writing for a more general audience can be difficult. But the rewards, both personal and financial, can be considerable. Matthew Reisz picks the brains of publishing professionals for their dos and don’ts
Scholars split on whether reforms – part of a wider relaxation of rules on doctorates – will tackle research fraud or whether they aim at the wrong target
Plos puts warnings on almost 50 papers after alleged reuse of ethical approvals, undeclared conflicts of interest and publication rates equivalent to an article every three days
Scientific sharing trailblazer hopes detailed tracking of researcher behaviour will help identify stubborn obstacles to more cooperative environment
Five years on from Cambridge University Press’ controversial compliance with a Chinese government request to make more than 300 articles unavailable to Chinese readers, publishers are increasingly self-censoring content on ‘sensitive’ topics. But is the trade-off justified, asks George Cooper
‘Read and publish’ deals must not be the only game in town, critic warns
Nation ‘would do well’ to seek out global expertise for its 2023 national publishing plan, with negotiations expected to be ‘long and protracted’
LSE historian accuses journal of ‘compromising intellectual quality in favour of identity politics’
Building a publishing platform that allows scholars to earn from sales of their papers has put all Pooja Sawrikar’s rage to good use
Greater efforts need to be made to distinguish predatory journals from those that at least aspire to scholarly standards, says Harvey Graff
Dozens of publishers have disclosed cost data as part of next stage of European-led open access push but ‘big two’ are absent
Region’s biggest transformative agreement ‘an important first step’ in open access ‘journey’