Academic Journals In Russia Retract Over 800 Papers Because Of Plagiarism, Self-Plagiarism And 'Gift Authorship'

from the what-price-scholarly-integrity? dept

Academic publishing hardly covers itself in glory, as Techdirt has reported over the years. It takes advantage of researchers' belief that they need to publish in so-called "high impact" titles for the sake of their careers, in order to pay nothing for the material they provide. Since articles are reviewed by other academics -- for free -- profit margins are extremely good: around 30-40%. In order to retain these unusually high levels, the industry does everything in its power to undermine and subvert cheaper alternatives like open access, and often takes a heavy-handed approach to the enforcement of "its" copyright -- even against the original author. Given this dismal industry background, it will come as no surprise to learn from Science magazine that Russian academic publishing has its own problems, fueled by the bad behavior of authors:

Academic journals in Russia are retracting more than 800 papers following a probe into unethical publication practices by a commission appointed by the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS). The moves come in the wake of several other queries suggesting the vast Russian scientific literature is riddled with plagiarism, self-plagiarism, and so-called gift authorship, in which academics become a co-author without having contributed any work.

The article mentions the findings of Antiplagiat, a plagiarism detection company. Antiplagiat looked at over four million academic articles published in the Russian language, and found that more than 70,000 were published at least twice. Some were reused 17 times. That's an impressively efficient re-cycling of material once it has been written, and saves people the bother of writing new papers, while racking up citations that look good on a CV.

The practice of what is known as "gift authorship" is arguably even more convenient for lazy academics. It involves selling slots on papers already written by other authors that have been accepted by a journal. No work or connection with the research is required. Instead, a site like 123mi.ru acts as a matchmaker between authors willing to sell slots on their articles, and those willing to pay for them. Prices range from around $500 to $3000 per author slot, depending on the subject matter and the journal -- although the latter is only revealed after the slot has been paid for. Some articles allow up to five authors slots to be bought in this way.

Academic publishing in Russia clearly has some serious problems, which undermine its value as a measure of scholarly achievement. Sadly, the same could be said about academic publishing in the West, albeit for different reasons.

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Filed Under: academic papers, plagiarism, russia


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  1. icon
    smbryant (profile), 13 Jan 2020 @ 10:18pm

    Somehow I'm now hearing Tom Lehrer singing "Lobachevsky"...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Jan 2020 @ 12:27am

    I see Russia has learned well from the ICE school of copyright domain seizures...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. identicon
    bob, 14 Jan 2020 @ 1:03am

    In Russia, academic papers write you!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. identicon
    From Russian Mordor, 14 Jan 2020 @ 1:18am

    Russia is now third world banana republic with nuclear weapon. Corrupt from head to toe. More and more like a soviet+orthodox corrupted Reich in Colombia 70s.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. identicon
    Sir Isaac Putin, 14 Jan 2020 @ 6:36am

    Force does not equal mass times acceleration, it is proportional to the amount of vodka consumed.

    A drunk body will stay drunk unless the vodka is removed

    link to this | view in thread ]

  6. identicon
    Anon, 14 Jan 2020 @ 7:58am

    Are you surprised?

    Scientific attribution has a fun history going bac decades. Remeber that in the 1920's Banting and Best proved that insulin could be isolated and used to control diabetes, saving the lives of millions. For this they awarded a Nobel Prize to... Banting and MacLeod. Because of course MacLeod headed the lab that Banting worked in so claimed a share of the glory he did not participate in - other than providing lab space and telling Banting the idea likely would not work. MacLeod also did not feel appropriate that a Nobel Prize should go to a mere graduate student like Best.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  7. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Jan 2020 @ 8:28am

    Re: Are you surprised?

    The "self-plagiarism" thing is surprising. I can understand plagiarism of others, but repeating one's own work seems too easily detectable. Are the people hiring these authors just going by the raw count without even a cursory inspection of the papers? (Would paywalling maybe stand in the way of that?)

    link to this | view in thread ]

  8. icon
    Norahc (profile), 14 Jan 2020 @ 8:29am

    Maybe they were just conducting research into how to make your entire profession look bad.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  9. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Jan 2020 @ 8:51am

    "Self-plagiarism" is a nonsense term that makes exactly as much sense as "robbing your own house." Any organization that uses it is not to be taken seriously.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  10. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Jan 2020 @ 9:30am

    Re:

    Yes. If you do not protect yourself from yourself then how in the world will you ever be motivated to produce any new works?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  11. identicon
    Anon, 14 Jan 2020 @ 11:02am

    Self-Plagarism

    I assume this is essentially recycling; but I also assume that an academic paper published without referencing the source would be plagiarism. So republishing without attributing to the original publication, simply puffing up your publish count, would be some form of bad.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  12. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 14 Jan 2020 @ 12:16pm

    Re: Re: Are you surprised?

    Self-plagiarism is an oxymoron.

    "pla·gia·rism
    noun
    the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own."

    Adding the prefix "self" to "plagiarism" should negate the "someone else" in "plagiarism"'s definition and therefore render the entire idea pointless as it's definition would be:

    "self-plagiarism
    noun
    the practice of taking one's own work or ideas and passing them off as one's own."

    Imagine having to attribute yourself in every conversation. You'd never finish one due to the ever expanding list of references.

    I guess in this world of "every idea must be owned", even those who "own" can't escape the burden of proof. What's next? Blockchain for every statement uttered ever? Massive penalties for infringing yourself? Who gets paid? You in the past? Or the idiots who made this mess? Lunacy.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  13. icon
    bhull242 (profile), 14 Jan 2020 @ 2:14pm

    Re: Re: Re: Are you surprised?

    Honestly, I think the reason people dislike so-called “self-plagiarism” is that it artificially inflates the stats often used to judge a researcher’s prestige, experience, and credibility without the researcher actually contributing anything new.

    The term, though, is bad. “Duplicative submissions” would be better in my opinion.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  14. icon
    DNY (profile), 14 Jan 2020 @ 2:52pm

    Re:

    "Self-plagiarism" is an absolutely absurd notion if one regards what is being stolen by a plagiarist as ideas or wording. What is really being stolen by the plagiarist is credit for originating the idea or wording. (cf. Copying is not theft. My using an idea or turn of phrase does not deprive anyone else of its use.)

    Even with a correct understanding of plagiarism "self-plagiarism" is a ridiculous notion except in the context of the academic "publish or perish" environment, where it represents "double-dipping" trying to get credit for the same work twice when coming up for promotion or tenure or (an vanishingly rare event anymore) a merit raise.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  15. icon
    urza9814 (profile), 15 Jan 2020 @ 6:48am

    Re: Re:

    Is it really that different though? Is it really that bad?

    It's not the biggest problem in the world, but there are certainly many cases where what is essentially the same study is done multiple times simply because the first results were published a while back, not heavily cited, and weren't found by the authors of the new study. By re-publishing these studies, you might prevent that kind of duplicated effort. If it's still being cited, then it's still useful to somebody. As long as one study doesn't cite another multiple times (by citing those duplicate publications), that seems perfectly fine to me. Not the best way of handling the problem, but not the worst either.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  16. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 15 Jan 2020 @ 10:45am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Are you surprised?

    I think the reason people dislike so-called “self-plagiarism” is that it artificially inflates the stats often used to judge a researcher’s prestige, experience, and credibility

    But that's ridiculous. If someone chooses who to hire based on which person's paper-count is larger, who are they to complain about the "self-plagiarizers" being lazy?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  17. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 15 Jan 2020 @ 10:49am

    Re: Re:

    Even with a correct understanding of plagiarism "self-plagiarism" is a ridiculous notion except in the context of the academic "publish or perish" environment, where it represents "double-dipping" trying to get credit for the same work twice

    But "same work" is so poorly defined. It's often really easy to split one large paper into ten smaller ones, if a person were so inclined. People shouldn't be hired or promoted based on raw, easily-manipulated numbers—that's as dumb as promoting whoever works the most hours or sends the most email. Someone who's familiar with the domain needs to take an actual look at the work.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  18. identicon
    bobob, 15 Jan 2020 @ 1:02pm

    That's certainly worse and more blatant than in the US, but the "publish or perish" paradigm does provide incentive for researchers to take what would be 1 decent paper and stretch it into several. Authors get added who may have only been on the periphery, but didn't really contribute. If one small subgroup of a larger research group publishes a paper, the entire research group appears in the author list. There are papers in high energy physics with literally over 1000 authors. The Russians just apparently decided to capitalize on the subjectivity of who to include.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  19. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 15 Jan 2020 @ 8:01pm

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Are you surprised?

    Paper count justifies to the administrator / business / bureaucrat class (i.e., people who know nothing about the work of which they are somehow in charge) the hiring or rating of a person because it is a metric. Unfortunately.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  20. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 15 Jan 2020 @ 8:08pm

    Re:

    It's sort of like "proactive", but self-contradictory rather than disgustingly redundant. We'll get used to it, like other more horrific abuses of language and malaporopisms we are inundated with every day.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  21. identicon
    Lewis Barrett, 6 Feb 2020 @ 7:48am

    Yes, I also often heard about such a problem in academic circles. Even my professor at the university told us about self plagiarism. I was writing my assignments using the service https://au.edubirdie.com/ where my work was checked for plagiarism all the time. And self-plagiarism was strictly prohibited.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  22. identicon
    John, 17 Sep 2020 @ 9:54am

    Good article!

    link to this | view in thread ]


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