{"title":"Predatory and Legitimate Open Access Journals in Language and Linguistics: Where Do They Part Ways?","authors":"Hassan Nejadghanbar, G. Hu","doi":"10.3138/jsp-2022-0021","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract:This study aimed to identify editorial features that can distinguish predatory and legitimate open access journals in the discipline of language and linguistics. Fifty- six journals from the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) and an equal number of journals from Beall’s updated list of potential predatory journals (PPJs) were selected for a close examination. Analyses showed that these two groups of journals differed markedly in a large number of editorial features: certain publication frequencies, contact address and contact information, mean number of articles published per year, specialized focus, mean peer review time, claimed adoption of peer review, submission mode, listing of editor(s)-in-chief, relevance of their expertise, mean number of editorial board members, availability of the guide for authors and aims/scope sections, an APC for open access, mean APC, claimed indexation by DOAJ, provision of ethical guidelines and publishing policies, and presence of DOIs. Nevertheless, they did not differ significantly with regard to mean years of editorial activity, mention of average peer review time, mention of acceptance rate, mean number of editorial board members, mean number of editors, listing of editorial boards, claimed indexation by Google Scholar/ERIC/Scopus/Web of Science, COPE membership, and availability of ISSNs. These findings point to distinguishing editorial features that language and linguistics scholars need to consider when they look for legitimate open access journals to disseminate their research.","PeriodicalId":44613,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Scholarly Publishing","volume":"161 1","pages":"224 - 248"},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Scholarly Publishing","FirstCategoryId":"91","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3138/jsp-2022-0021","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
Abstract:This study aimed to identify editorial features that can distinguish predatory and legitimate open access journals in the discipline of language and linguistics. Fifty- six journals from the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) and an equal number of journals from Beall’s updated list of potential predatory journals (PPJs) were selected for a close examination. Analyses showed that these two groups of journals differed markedly in a large number of editorial features: certain publication frequencies, contact address and contact information, mean number of articles published per year, specialized focus, mean peer review time, claimed adoption of peer review, submission mode, listing of editor(s)-in-chief, relevance of their expertise, mean number of editorial board members, availability of the guide for authors and aims/scope sections, an APC for open access, mean APC, claimed indexation by DOAJ, provision of ethical guidelines and publishing policies, and presence of DOIs. Nevertheless, they did not differ significantly with regard to mean years of editorial activity, mention of average peer review time, mention of acceptance rate, mean number of editorial board members, mean number of editors, listing of editorial boards, claimed indexation by Google Scholar/ERIC/Scopus/Web of Science, COPE membership, and availability of ISSNs. These findings point to distinguishing editorial features that language and linguistics scholars need to consider when they look for legitimate open access journals to disseminate their research.
摘要:本研究旨在识别语言和语言学学科中可以区分掠夺性和合法开放获取期刊的编辑特征。开放获取期刊目录(DOAJ)中的56种期刊和Beall更新的潜在掠夺性期刊(PPJs)中的同等数量的期刊被选中进行仔细检查。分析表明,这两组期刊在许多编辑特征上存在显著差异:某些出版频率、联系地址和联系信息、每年发表的平均文章数量、专业重点、平均同行评审时间、声称采用同行评审、提交模式、主编名单、他们的专业知识的相关性、编辑委员会成员的平均人数、作者指南和目标/范围部分的可用性、开放获取的APC、平均APC、DOAJ声称的索引、道德准则和出版政策的规定、以及doi的存在。然而,在平均编辑活动年数、提及的平均同行评审时间、提及的接受率、编委会成员的平均人数、编辑的平均人数、编委会名单、谷歌Scholar/ERIC/Scopus/Web of Science的声称索引、COPE会员资格和issn的可用性方面,他们并没有显著差异。这些发现指出,语言和语言学学者在寻找合法的开放获取期刊来传播他们的研究时,需要考虑不同的编辑特征。
期刊介绍:
For more than 40 years, the Journal of Scholarly Publishing has been the authoritative voice of academic publishing. The journal combines philosophical analysis with practical advice and aspires to explain, argue, discuss, and question the large collection of new topics that continually arise in the publishing field. JSP has also examined the future of scholarly publishing, scholarship on the web, digitization, copyright, editorial policies, computer applications, marketing, and pricing models. It is the indispensable resource for academics and publishers that addresses the new challenges resulting from changes in technology and funding and from innovations in production and publishing.