
Dear All, Greeting. Of recent, there has been an explosion of FREE to access and PAY to publish business models in the STM domain. I have been observing a growing set of new metrics that are being put in place by the new business model publishers. Most importantly, various websites are publishing details of predator publishers and some names are quite common to all of us. Would appreciate to understand the stand of senior library professionals on the topic and what is the impact of such content on library budgets and research quality? warm regards SN -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.

As simple as searching for a needle in the Haystack.
Warm regards,
Dr Guruprasad
On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 4:15 PM, Suresh Narayanan
Dear All,
Greeting.
Of recent, there has been an explosion of FREE to access and PAY to publish business models in the STM domain.
I have been observing a growing set of new metrics that are being put in place by the new business model publishers. Most importantly, various websites are publishing details of predator publishers and some names are quite common to all of us.
Would appreciate to understand the stand of senior library professionals on the topic and what is the impact of such content on library budgets and research quality?
warm regards SN -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.

The irony is that one group of LIS fraternity is publishing their papers in these predatory and dubious journals while the other group of people are making hue and cry about these journals. Is this not double standard? Koteswara Rao Retd. Librarian, UOH Sent from my iPhone
On 22-Oct-2016, at 8:40 PM, Ramachandran Guruprasad
wrote: As simple as searching for a needle in the Haystack.
Warm regards, Dr Guruprasad
On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 4:15 PM, Suresh Narayanan
wrote: Dear All,
Greeting.
Of recent, there has been an explosion of FREE to access and PAY to publish business models in the STM domain.
I have been observing a growing set of new metrics that are being put in place by the new business model publishers. Most importantly, various websites are publishing details of predator publishers and some names are quite common to all of us.
Would appreciate to understand the stand of senior library professionals on the topic and what is the impact of such content on library budgets and research quality?
warm regards SN -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.

Dear professionals,
Greetings.
At the outset I would like to apologize Mr Suresh Narayan for the delayed
response.
As far as I know from the study I have conducted on the concept “Predatory
Journals” I would like to convey few of my opinions as rejoinder to Mr
Suresh Narayan’s mail on LIS Forum.
I felt that the response of Koteshwara Rao Mimidi is anomalous since the
predatory journals are emerged in all discipline. It is not that one part
of LIS fraternity is publishing in predatory journals and other group is
condemning on publishing in predatory journals. Being library professionals
it is also our responsibility to keep our user community informed about
genuine journals to have their papers published while other side
researchers are requested by predatory journals through e mails mentioning
fake impact factor to stimulate researchers for publishing articles in
their journal.
Actually the term “*Predatory Journals*” has been coined by Jeffrey
Beall, librarian
at Auraria Library, University of Colorado Denver, in Denver, Colorado.
This person has created a website in which the list of predatory journals
in various disciplines is frequently updated not just the library and
information science.
*Here are my observations on the predatory journals:*
1. Instant publication (within two days acceptance letter will be given
seeking publication charges).
2. Publishes even large portion of plagiarized content (more than 90%
plagiarized content can also be published).
3. Doesn’t review the articles (though journals are peer reviewed ones).
4. Provides wrong impact factor.
5. Some of the journals are not having internet domain (created using free
website)
6. Automated reviews (for all articles common reviews or suggestions are
given).
I think there are no committees or council like *The office of Research
integrity (ORI)*, *Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and the Council
of Science Editors (CSE) *in India which addresses the concerns of editors
and publishers of scientific journals about scientific fraud and raises
awareness among editors, reviewers and educates authors about unethical
behavior. In case these types of offices exist in India how they are
monitoring the publishing or integrity of the journals which were given
ISSN by National Science Library, India.
The rate of retraction of papers due to plagiarism,
fabrication/falsification of data and other academic misconduct is very
less in India but in other countries like USA and UK a paper with small
portion of plagiarized content gets retracted. For the reports on
retractions of scientific papers one can subscribe or visit to
http://retractionwatch.com/ .
In my study it is also observed the advisorship and editorship of many
professors and librarians in the journals which accepts even papers with
high similarity index. This way directly or indirectly research community
itself becoming the supporter of these sorts of predatory journals.
In LIS field many researches like bibliometric and citation analysis are
being done similar to this if we start doing research on the publication
ethics/integrity of journals we can help India becoming predatory journals
free country.
Regards
Kodandarama
Temporary Assistant Librarian
University of Mysore
Mysore
On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 1:32 PM, Koteswara Rao Mamidi
The irony is that one group of LIS fraternity is publishing their papers in these predatory and dubious journals while the other group of people are making hue and cry about these journals. Is this not double standard? Koteswara Rao Retd. Librarian, UOH
Sent from my iPhone
On 22-Oct-2016, at 8:40 PM, Ramachandran Guruprasad
wrote: As simple as searching for a needle in the Haystack.
Warm regards, Dr Guruprasad
On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 4:15 PM, Suresh Narayanan < suresh@bridgepeople.in> wrote:
Dear All,
Greeting.
Of recent, there has been an explosion of FREE to access and PAY to publish business models in the STM domain.
I have been observing a growing set of new metrics that are being put in place by the new business model publishers. Most importantly, various websites are publishing details of predator publishers and some names are quite common to all of us.
Would appreciate to understand the stand of senior library professionals on the topic and what is the impact of such content on library budgets and research quality?
warm regards SN -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.

Answering to second part of the question by Suresh, "what is the impact of OA content on library budgets". There are many publications and models can be found and emerging models. One of our presentation can be found with some information of libraries and consortium should approach this.
"Hybrid journals contains articles behind a pay-wall to be subscribed, as well as papers made open access when author pays article processing charge (APC). In such cases, an Institution will end up paying twice and Publishers tend to double-dip. Discussions and pilot models are emerging on pricing options, such as “offset pricing,” [where APCs are adjusted or discounted with subscription costs as vouchers or reductions in next year subscriptions, APCs beyond the subscription costs are modestly capped etc] and thus reduce Institutions’ cost. This presentation will explain different models available and how can we attain a transparent costing structure, where the scholarly community can feel the fairness in Publishers’ pricing mechanisms. Though most of the offset systems are developed through national level or consortium level negotiations, experience of individual institutions, like KAUST that subscribe to large e-journals collections, is important in making right decisions on saving Institutes costs and support openness in scholarly communications."
Link: http://repository.kaust.edu.sa/kaust/handle/10754/617078
----------
Dr. J. K. VIJAYAKUMAR,
MLIS, PhD, MSILS (UK),
Interim Library Director,
King Abdullah University of Science & Technology,
www.kaust.edu.sa
Residence: +966-128-025-690,
On Sunday, October 23, 2016 5:12 PM, Koteswara Rao Mamidi
On 22-Oct-2016, at 8:40 PM, Ramachandran Guruprasad
wrote: As simple as searching for a needle in the Haystack.
Warm regards, Dr Guruprasad
On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 4:15 PM, Suresh Narayanan
wrote: Dear All,
Greeting.
Of recent, there has been an explosion of FREE to access and PAY to publish business models in the STM domain.
I have been observing a growing set of new metrics that are being put in place by the new business model publishers. Most importantly, various websites are publishing details of predator publishers and some names are quite common to all of us.
Would appreciate to understand the stand of senior library professionals on the topic and what is the impact of such content on library budgets and research quality?
warm regards SN -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
participants (5)
-
Dr. J. K. Vijayakumar
-
Koteswara Rao Mamidi
-
ram sripa
-
Ramachandran Guruprasad
-
Suresh Narayanan