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@article{2255037, author = {Barker, Timothy H and Pollock, Danielle and Stone, Jennifer C and Klugar, Miloslav and Scott, Anna M and Stern, Cindy and Wiechula, Rick and Shamseer, Larissa and Aromataris, Edoardo and RossandWhite, Amanda and Munn, Zachary}, article_location = {HOBOKEN}, article_number = {3}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jrsm.1613}, keywords = {evidence synthesis; fraudulent data; predatory journals; predatory publishing; systematic reviews}, language = {eng}, issn = {1759-2879}, journal = {RESEARCH SYNTHESIS METHODS}, title = {How should we handle predatory journals in evidence synthesis? A descriptive survey-based cross-sectional study of evidence synthesis experts}, url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jrsm.1613}, volume = {14}, year = {2023} }
TY - JOUR ID - 2255037 AU - Barker, Timothy H - Pollock, Danielle - Stone, Jennifer C - Klugar, Miloslav - Scott, Anna M - Stern, Cindy - Wiechula, Rick - Shamseer, Larissa - Aromataris, Edoardo - Ross-White, Amanda - Munn, Zachary PY - 2023 TI - How should we handle predatory journals in evidence synthesis? A descriptive survey-based cross-sectional study of evidence synthesis experts JF - RESEARCH SYNTHESIS METHODS VL - 14 IS - 3 SP - 370-381 EP - 370-381 PB - WILEY SN - 17592879 KW - evidence synthesis KW - fraudulent data KW - predatory journals KW - predatory publishing KW - systematic reviews UR - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jrsm.1613 N2 - Synthesizers of evidence are increasingly likely to encounter studies published in predatory journals during the evidence synthesis process. The evidence synthesis discipline is uniquely positioned to encounter novel concerns associated with predatory journals. The objective of this research was to explore the attitudes, opinions, and experiences of experts in the synthesis of evidence regarding predatory journals. Employing a descriptive survey-based cross-sectional study design, these experts were asked a series of questions regarding predatory journals to explore these attitudes, opinions, and experiences.Two hundred and sixty four evidence synthesis experts responded to this survey. Most respondents agreed with the definition of a predatory journal (86%), however several (19%) responded that this definition was difficult to apply practically. Many respondents believed that studies published in predatory journals are still eligible for inclusion into an evidence synthesis project. However, this was only after the study had been determined to be 'high-quality' (39%) or if the results were validated (13%).While many respondents could identify common characteristics of these journals, there was still hesitancy regarding the appropriate methods to follow when considering including these studies into an evidence synthesis project. ER -
BARKER, Timothy H, Danielle POLLOCK, Jennifer C STONE, Miloslav KLUGAR, Anna M SCOTT, Cindy STERN, Rick WIECHULA, Larissa SHAMSEER, Edoardo AROMATARIS, Amanda ROSS-WHITE and Zachary MUNN. How should we handle predatory journals in evidence synthesis? A descriptive survey-based cross-sectional study of evidence synthesis experts. \textit{RESEARCH SYNTHESIS METHODS}. HOBOKEN: WILEY, 2023, vol.~14, No~3, p.~370-381. ISSN~1759-2879. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jrsm.1613.
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