Scholarly publishing and journal targeting in the time of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic: a cross-sectional survey of rheumatologists and other specialists

被引:0
作者
Latika Gupta
Armen Yuri Gasparyan
Olena Zimba
Durga Prasanna Misra
机构
[1] Sanjay Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Medical Sciences,Department of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology
[2] Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust (Teaching Trust of the University of Birmingham,Departments of Rheumatology and Research and Development
[3] UK),Department of Internal Medicine No. 2
[4] Russells Hall Hospital,undefined
[5] Danylo Halytsky Lviv National Medical University,undefined
来源
Rheumatology International | 2020年 / 40卷
关键词
COVID-19; Rheumatology; Open access publishing; Social media; Archiving; Preprints; Periodicals as topic;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The evolving research landscape in the time of the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic calls for greater understanding of the perceptions of scholars regarding the current state and future of publishing. An anonymised and validated e-survey featuring 30 questions was circulated among rheumatologists and other specialists over social media to understand preferences while choosing target journals, publishing standards, commercial editing services, preprint archiving, social media and alternative publication activities. Of 108 respondents, a significant proportion were clinicians (68%), researchers (60%) and educators (47%), with median 23 publications and 15 peer-review accomplishments. The respondents were mainly rheumatologists from India, Ukraine and Turkey. While choosing target journals, relevance to their field (69%), PubMed Central archiving (61%) and free publishing (59%) were the major factors. Thirty-nine surveyees (36%) claimed that they often targeted local journals for publishing their research. However, only 18 (17%) perceived their local society journals as trustworthy. Occasional publication in the so-called predatory journals (5, 5%) was reported and obtaining support from commercial editing agencies to improve English and data presentation was not uncommon (23, 21%). The opinion on preprint archiving was disputed; only one-third believed preprints were useful. High-quality peer review (56%), full and immediate open access (46%) and post-publication social media promotion (32%) were identified as key anticipated features of scholarly publishing in the foreseeable future. These perceptions of surveyed scholars call for greater access to free publishing, attention to proper usage of English and editing skills, and a larger role for engagement over social media.
引用
收藏
页码:2023 / 2030
页数:7
相关论文
共 78 条
[1]  
Fleming N(2020)Coronavirus misinformation, and how scientists can help to fight it Nature 583 155-156
[2]  
Soltani P(2020)Retracted COVID-19 articles: a side-effect of the hot race to publication Scientometrics 125 819-822
[3]  
Patini R(2019)Scientific hypotheses: writing, promoting, and predicting implications J Korean Med Sci 34 e300-1060
[4]  
Gasparyan AY(2020)Retractions in rehabilitation and sport sciences journals: a systematic review Arch Phys Med Rehabil 39 1049-11
[5]  
Ayvazyan L(2020)Integrity of clinical research conduct, reporting, publishing, and post-publication promotion in rheumatology Clin Rheumatol 35 e216-1056
[6]  
Mukanova U(2020)The "Infodemic" of COVID-19 Arthritis Rheumatol 6 e34-1778
[7]  
Yessirkepov M(2020)English writing of non-anglophone researchers J Korean Med Sci 34 e180-955
[8]  
Kitas GD(2020)Money down the drain: predatory publishing in the COVID-19 era Can J Public Health 15 261-9
[9]  
Kardeş S(2020)Post-publication promotion in rheumatology: a survey focusing on social media RheumatolInt 30 1-e335
[10]  
Levack W(2004)Improving the quality of web surveys: the checklist for reporting results of internet e-surveys (CHERRIES) J Med Internet Res 98 1051-174