Abstract

In which journal a scientist publishes is considered one of the most crucial factors determining their career. The underlying common assumption is that only the best scientists manage to publish in a highly selective tier of the most prestigious journals. However, data from several lines of evidence suggest that the methodological quality of scientific experiments does not increase with increasing rank of the journal. On the contrary, an accumulating body of evidence suggests the inverse: methodological quality and, consequently, reliability of published research works in several fields may be decreasing with increasing journal rank. The data supporting these conclusions circumvent confounding factors such as increased readership and scrutiny for these journals, focusing instead on quantifiable indicators of methodological soundness in the published literature, relying on, in part, semi-automated data extraction from often thousands of publications at a time. With the accumulating evidence over the last decade grew the realization that the very existence of scholarly journals, due to their inherent hierarchy, constitutes one of the major threats to publicly funded science: hiring, promoting and funding scientists who publish unreliable science eventually erodes public trust in science.

Highlights

  • The most groundbreaking, transformative research results deserve a broad readership and a large audience

  • Even before science became hypercompetitive at every level, and again results published in prestigious journals were later found to be false

  • One could tentatively interpret what scant data there are on retractions, as suggestive that increased scrutiny may only play a minor role in a combination of several factors leading to more retractions in higher ranking journals

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Summary

Björn Brembs*

Data from several lines of evidence suggest that the methodological quality of scientific experiments does not increase with increasing rank of the journal. An accumulating body of evidence suggests the inverse: methodological quality and, reliability of published research works in several fields may be decreasing with increasing journal rank. The data supporting these conclusions circumvent confounding factors such as increased readership and scrutiny for these journals, focusing instead on quantifiable indicators of methodological soundness in the published literature, relying on, in part, semi-automated data extraction from often thousands of publications at a time.

INTRODUCTION
Journal Rank
JOURNAL RANKING
RETRACTIONS AND ERROR DETECTION
Crystallographic Quality
Experimental Design in in Vivo Animal Experimentation
Reliability Metrics in Psychology
Reproducibility Efforts
CONCLUSION
Findings
Psychology Biomedicine
Full Text
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