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Analytics giant denies accusations it stole data but ends development of MetaDoor platform in settlement with WorldCat
Revealing desk rejection rates, peer review processing times and other useful operational data would do more to correct slipshod journal practices than an ‘author’s bill of rights’, says Jerry Jacobs
Encouraging students to embody their institution’s distinctive values will allow it to present a more rounded view of the true worth of higher education, says Claire Taylor
Changes that pretend scientists do not care about publishing in highly selective journals will end eLife’s crucial role in science publishing, says long-time supporter Paul Bieniasz
Following order of 2025 deadline for taxpayer-funded science to be made freely available to the public, major scientific society warns of costs, especially for women and youth
Tenfold increase in article output should be a research integrity ‘red flag’ for publishers, says Cambridge researcher Nick Wise
Monograph publishing needs partnerships between university presses and scholarly societies, say Helen Beebee, David Teira and Brian Scrivener
Biomedical and life sciences publisher says it wants to focus reviewers’ attention on content of research
Lack of institutional support in meeting the growing demand for data sharing must be addressed, says global study of attitudes towards publishing
New York-based manga comic expert claims withdrawal of Karl Andersson’s controversial paper may ‘stifle innovation and scholarship’ in future
‘Fluffy rationale’, ‘uncooked records’ and ‘kidney disappointment’ are among the nonsensical terms that have exposed bogus scientific papers
Research fraudbuster says publication of six papers with hallmarks of Russian paper mills indicates why periodicals must commit to more post-submission transparency
Eastern authors ‘risk falling behind’ on visibility and rankings if their work remains behind paywall while US moves to open research, scholars warn
It is scandalous that wealthy publishers make academics provide what is, in effect, unlimited legal expenses insurance, says Andrew Tettenborn
Campaigners say academic publishers will have to ‘figure this out pretty darn fast’ as Biden sets 2025 deadline for switch to instant open access
The regulations can be ambiguous, but the masturbation paper furore is a result of supervisors’ and reviewers’ lack of vigilance, says Michelle Shipworth
In holdover from print-dominant era, top 330 academic science titles too often seen as banning or hindering published rebuttals of their articles
Time-honoured standards of professionalism appear to be unravelling. Authors should be entitled to demand better, says Harvey Graff
Analysis of more than 50,000 behavioural and brain sciences articles also suggests their results are less likely to be replicated by others
Sage says it is continuing to investigate article in which doctoral candidate chronicles how he ‘enjoyed’ provocative cartoon images of boys
In some countries, male researchers’ article output appears to have been more adversely affected, according to new study
‘Wanking is not a research method; it is just wanking,’ says professor, as doctoral candidate chronicles how he ‘enjoyed’ provocative cartoon images of boys
Without a fuller embrace of repositories, the transition with be slow, partial and siloed, says Kathleen Shearer
Global poll of nearly 10,000 researchers reveals continued influence of bibliometrics in determining reputation and institutional ties
California continues trailblazing push with major publishers but sees fundamental cost problem still unresolved
If authors are no longer required to justify their fundamental assumptions, where does that leave referees, asks Martyn Hammersley
Both journals and funders need to do more to support the gold route that authors want and open science needs, says Steven Inchcoombe
Letter urges Baroness Hale and Lord Reed to step back from Law Quarterly Review and Criminal Law Review until diversity improved
World’s biggest bibliographic database claims MetaDoor is ‘misappropriating’ its catalogue to drive it out of business
Academics rejected by university presses may turn to hybrid or self-publishers. But Harvey Graff’s experience suggests they should tread very carefully
Big publishers finding switch away from paywalls challenging, says European-led coalition
Lab-by-lab approach determining who gets credit and who doesn’t must be replaced by more comprehensive policies, researchers say
Female scholars grossly under-represented on editorial boards of public health and environmental science publications, says Cambridge-led study
Peer-reviewed open access entry aims to unite field burdened by outside political turmoil and internal disagreements over academic norms
Researchers need to be confident enough to lift the veil on the debate that is at the heart of scientific progress, says Rebecca Lawrence
High costs, opaque contracts and the difficulty of finding peer reviewers all point to the need for a divorce, says Robert Kaplan
The professionalism and collegiality with which editors used to respond to complaints has all but disappeared, says Harvey Graff
Salim Abdool Karim welcomes increased transparency of research brought about by pandemic but says it has also brought its challenges
Nieces of nation’s incoming justice minister accused of faking research papers to help gain Ivy League admission
Universities seeking significant savings after Elsevier victory
Law experts call for broader effort to improve authors’ copyright interests
Scholars question whether open access platforms could step in to replace dominance of China National Knowledge Infrastructure
As a major publisher and information provider, Elsevier embraces its role in promoting diversity, say Ylann Schemm and Holly Falk-Krzesinski
The president of Seoul National University discusses the existential crisis facing higher education in South Korea
Study finds little ‘substantive’ change between 2002 and 2019
Worldwide survey of scientists suggests almost two-thirds are now positive about their use
Academics call for rethink of latest Australian security intervention
In developing nations deemed too rich for fee waivers, subscription journals are the only publishing option, say three Brazilian scientists
New citation study overturns long-held belief that science is no laughing matter
Links to journals’ genuine websites should be added to the government’s database of reputable publishing outlets, says Rameez Mahesar
Temporary deal arrives on day of UK’s new open access policy, but raises issue of paying high price for ‘ego trip’ of Nature publication
Legitimate concerns about publishers’ grip on the academy will not be addressed if open access debate remains so polarised, says Amy Brand
Deal includes prestigious Cell Press and Lancet journals
East-West schism widened by Russian academia being cut off from world, says scholar
Grassroots effort by linguists seeks to lift up non-native English speakers, many of whom cannot afford professional proofreaders
Trials suggest that far from being mutually exclusive, both can play an important role, says Kim Eggleton
Audit of top psychology and neuroscience titles highlights relative lack of female editors and US dominance that may be harming science, say authors
Study analysing readability and citations suggests academics may have an incentive to keep their abstracts complex
Open access champion also proposes an IB for universities, as competition gives way to collaboration
Establishing a peer review accreditation scheme would also help incentivise higher standards, says Arfan Ghani