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. 2025 Feb 4;122(5):e2401231121.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.2401231121. Epub 2025 Jan 27.

The misalignment of incentives in academic publishing and implications for journal reform

Affiliations

The misalignment of incentives in academic publishing and implications for journal reform

Jennifer S Trueblood et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. .

Abstract

For most researchers, academic publishing serves two goals that are often misaligned-knowledge dissemination and establishing scientific credentials. While both goals can encourage research with significant depth and scope, the latter can also pressure scholars to maximize publication metrics. Commercial publishing companies have capitalized on the centrality of publishing to the scientific enterprises of knowledge dissemination and academic recognition to extract large profits from academia by leveraging unpaid services from reviewers, creating financial barriers to research dissemination, and imposing substantial fees for open access. We present a set of perspectives exploring alternative models for communicating and disseminating scientific research. Acknowledging that the success of new publishing models depends on their impact on existing approaches for assigning academic credit that often prioritize prestigious publications and metrics such as citations and impact factors, we also provide various viewpoints on reforming academic evaluation.

Keywords: academic journals; academic prestige economy; alternative publishing models; publication bias; publish or perish culture.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests statement:J.S.T. is a former President of the Society for Mathematical Psychology. J.S.T. was involved in the negotiations of the Journal of Mathematical Psychology contract with Elsevier in 2018. S.M.F. is editor-in-chief of the Journal of Trial and Error. S.D.M.G. is cofounder of the Journal of Trial and Error. G.G. is vice-president of the European Research Council, beginning in 2024. S.L. is Chair of the Governing Board of the Psychonomic Society in 2024. S.L. serves on the European Research Advisory Council for Springer Nature in an unpaid capacity. D.M. is Editor-in-Chief of Behavior Research Methods. M.C.M. is a Schmidt Futures Foundation Innovation Fellow and a Research Affiliate at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. A.L.R. is a former Senior Editor of Neuron. J.t.S. is in the process of becoming editor (“recommender”) at Peer Community In Registered Reports.

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