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Jan

---------- Forwarded message ---------
Från: LIBLICENSE <liblicense@gmail.com>
Date: fre 25 okt. 2024 kl 21:10
Subject: Scitility’s tool ‘Argos’ identifies work whose authors have a record of misconduct
To: <LIBLICENSE-L@listserv.crl.edu>


From: Ann Shumelda Okerson <aokerson@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 25 Oct 2024 00:20:05 -0400

Journals with high rates of suspicious papers flagged by science-integrity start-up

22 October 2024
By Richard Van Noorden

The science-integrity website Argos, which was launched in September by Scitility, a technology firm headquartered in Sparks, Nevada, gives papers a risk score on the basis of their authors’ publication records, and on whether the paper heavily cites already-retracted research. A paper categorized as ‘high risk’ might have multiple authors whose other studies have been retracted for reasons related to misconduct, for example. Having a high score doesn’t prove that a paper is low quality, but suggests that it is worth investigating.

The papers that most heavily cite retracted studies

Argos is one of a growing number of research-integrity tools that look for red flags in papers. These include the Papermill Alarm, made by Clear Skies, and Signals, by Research Signals, both London-based firms. Because creators of such software sell their manuscript-screening tools to publishers, they are generally reluctant to name affected journals. But Argos, which is offering free accounts to individuals and fuller access to science-integrity sleuths and journalists, is the first to show public insights.

Full article here:



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Jan Szczepański
F.d Förste bibliotekarie och chef för f.d Avdelningen för humaniora,
vid f.d. Centralbiblioteket, Göteborgs universitetsbibliotek
E-post: Jan.Szczepanski63@gmail.com