Predatory Journals and Perished Articles; a Letter to Editor
Archives of Academic Emergency Medicine,
Vol. 5 No. 1 (2017),
1 January 2017
,
Page e49
https://doi.org/10.22037/aaem.v5i1.174
Abstract
In recent years, academic publishing has been faced with many destructive phenomena. “Predatory publishers†(or journals) are one challenge for  cholarly publishing. This term was introduced to academic societies for the first time by Jeffrey Beall in 2010. This letter to editor is about predatory journals and perished articles in the field of emergency medicine.- predatory journals
- medical publishing
- medical journalism
How to Cite
References
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Lukić T, Blešić I, Basarin B, Ivanović B, Milošević D, Sakulski D. Predatory and fake scientific journals/publishers–a global outbreak with rising trend: a review. Geographica Pannonica. 2014;18(3):69-81.
Beall J. Criteria for determining predatory open-access publishers. Scholarly open access https://scholarlyoa files wordpress com/2015/01/criteria-2015 pdf,(accessed 2015-02-14). 2015.
Beall J. Beall’s list of predatory publishers, Scholarly Open Access [cited 2016 14 april]. Available from: https://scholarlyoa.com/2016/01/05/bealls-list-of-predatory-publishers-2016/.
Simón A. Pitfalls of Predatory Journals: A Personal Account. Comprehensive Psychology. 2016;5:1-5.
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Beall J. Beall’s list of stand alone journals, Scholarly Open Access [cited 2016 14 April]. Available from: https://scholarlyoa.com/individual-journals/.
Clark J, Smith R. Firm action needed on predatory journals. BMJ. 2015;350:h210.
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