«While quality can be patchy even in legitimate journals, we found that it was far worse in
suspected predatory journals,» said Larissa Shamseer, a PhD student at The Ottawa Hospital and the University of Ottawa and co-author of the study.
Not exact matches
Researchers from The Ottawa Hospital and the University of Ottawa analyzed 1,907 research papers published in 220
suspected biomedical
predatory journals.
A massive investigation published in Nature shows that contrary to popular belief, a majority of papers in
suspected biomedical
predatory journals (57 percent) are from high or upper middle income countries, with many coming from prestigious institutions.