4.5 Article

Citation patterns between impact-factor and questionable journals

Journal

SCIENTOMETRICS
Volume 126, Issue 10, Pages 8541-8560

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-021-04121-8

Keywords

Questionable journals; Beall's list; Cabell's list; Citation analysis; Predatory journals

Funding

  1. National Science Centre in Poland [UMO-2017/26/E/HS2/00019]

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The study aims to investigate the impact of legitimate journals recognized by authorities on the visibility of questionable journals, and found that the impact factor of citing journals and the size of cited journals are not good predictors of the number of citations to the questionable journals.
One of the most fundamental issues in academia today is understanding the differences between legitimate and questionable publishing. While decision-makers and managers consider journals indexed in popular citation indexes such as Web of Science or Scopus as legitimate, they use two lists of questionable journals (Beall's and Cabell's), one of which has not been updated for a few years, to identify the so-called predatory journals. The main aim of our study is to reveal the contribution of the journals accepted as legitimate by the authorities to the visibility of questionable journals. For this purpose, 65 questionable journals from social sciences and 2338 Web-of-Science-indexed journals that cited these questionable journals were examined in-depth in terms of index coverages, subject categories, impact factors and self-citation patterns. We have analysed 3234 unique cited papers from questionable journals and 5964 unique citing papers (6750 citations of cited papers) from Web of Science journals. We found that 13% of the questionable papers were cited by WoS journals and 37% of the citations were from impact-factor journals. The findings show that neither the impact factor of citing journals nor the size of cited journals is a good predictor of the number of citations to the questionable journals.

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