Nature | News

Faked peer reviews prompt 64 retractions

The cull follows a similar discovery earlier this year.

Article tools

Rights & Permissions

A leading scientific publisher has retracted 64 articles in 10 journals, after an internal investigation discovered fabricated peer-review reports linked to the articles’ publication.

Berlin-based Springer announced the retractions in an 18 August statement. In May, Springer merged with parts of Macmillan Science and Education — which publishes Nature to form the new company Springer Nature.

The cull comes after similar discoveries of ‘fake peer review’ by several other major publishers, including London-based BioMed Central, an arm of Springer, which began retracting 43 articles in March citing "reviews from fabricated reviewers". The practice can occur when researchers submitting a paper for publication suggest reviewers, but supply contact details for them that actually route requests for review back to the researchers themselves.

The Springer investigation began in November 2014 after a journal editor-in-chief noticed irregularities in contact details for peer reviewers. These included e-mail addresses that the editor they suspected were bogus but were accompanied by the names of real researchers, says William Curtis, executive vice-president for publishing, medicine and biomedicine at Springer. The investigation, which focused on articles for which authors had suggested their own reviewers, detected numerous fabricated peer-review reports. Affected authors and their institutions have been told about the investigation’s findings, says Curtis.

Future vetting

Springer declined to name the articles or journals involved. However, a search of the publisher’s website identified more than 40 retraction notices dated between 17 and 19 August 2015 for articles in 8 Springer journals.

Springer now plans to vet peer-reviewer suggestions more carefully, Curtis says. Its journals may in future request the supply of institutional e-mail addresses or Scopus author IDs for reviewers.

When BioMed Central uncovered its peer-review problem, senior editor for research integrity Elizabeth Moylan noted that some of the issues seemed to involve companies that charge scientists to edit their manuscripts and help them with journal submission. Curtis says that Springer has “limited evidence” to implicate such third parties in some of the cases it uncovered.

Double-checks

Some publishers, such as BioMed Central and San Francisco-based PLoS, have ended the practice of author-suggested reviewers in response to fake peer review. But Elizabeth Wager, a publication consultant and former chair of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), says that “less drastic” measures, such as double-checking non-institutional e-mail addresses given for reviewers, would allow journals to hold on to the expertise that these reviewers often provide.

“The particular problem of fake review comes about when authors are allowed to suggest possible peer reviewers,” says Wager. “The system sounds good. The trouble is when people game the system and use it as a loophole.”

The involvement of third-party companies in bogus peer review is “more worrying”, Wager adds, because it could mean that the practice is more systemic and extends beyond a handful of rogue authors.

Virginia Barbour, the current chair of COPE, says that Springer has informed the committee about the investigation. “It is important publishers take rapid but careful action, as here,” she says.

Journal name:
Nature
DOI:
doi:10.1038/nature.2015.18202

For the best commenting experience, please login or register as a user and agree to our Community Guidelines. You will be re-directed back to this page where you will see comments updating in real-time and have the ability to recommend comments to other users.

Comments for this thread are now closed.

Comments

5 comments Subscribe to comments

  1. Avatar for Gerard Harbison
    Gerard Harbison
    Other than to cover their metaphorical donkeys, why is Springer concealing the names of the guilty? At the very least, we should have a list of the retracted papers. If peer review, a badly broken system, needs one thing more than anything else, it needs more transparency. Springer needs to publish the full facts as they understand them, and let the community decide for itself. The truth is an absolute defense against libel charges.
  2. Avatar for Jonathan Gressel
    Jonathan Gressel
    As a journal editor (Plant Science) I often find that some of the author-suggested referees are amongst the most cogent and stringent, but I vet each one using Elsevier provided software that gives h index, the perspective referees last three papers, whether the person has published together with the author of the manuscript, and email address from the person's publications. It is sloppy editors who do not check out these proposed referees and do not check a manuscript with iThenticate, who cause these problems that end in retractions. Its just a flick of the finger with good software to get this information. The software could even be better - if the journal gave such data automatically with author-proposed referees.
  3. Avatar for Malvinder Parmar
    Malvinder Parmar
    The journals should stop asking for reviewers names when the author submits their paper. Some journals don't let you go to next step until you enter some names. I often tell all journals to select their own reviewers. I strongly feel that journals should learn from this and stop the practice of asking authors to suggest reviewers. This often leads to other issues as well, as often authors may use their friends or other Team-partners from around the world, that may help each other and led to many times poor quality articles being accepted.
  4. Avatar for Anurag Chaurasia
    Anurag Chaurasia
    "Institutional e-mail ID's" are hosted & controlled by scientific institute website, with an access to institute web administrator, having another possibility of manuscript accessibility without knowledge of e-mail holder scientist/staff. Anurag Chaurasia, anurag_vns1@yahoo.co.in, govtofindia.icar@gmail.com, +919452196686{M}
  5. Avatar for Sridhar Ranganathan
    Sridhar Ranganathan
    This is about the "institutional e-mail ID's" of the peer reviewers. There may be a few retired (from active regular services) scientists who act as peer reviewers. These people get involved by keeping themselves up-to-date with the developments by way of their habit (acquired during service) and interest to serve science. This decision would make them unavailable for peer reviewing.

Taking a gamble

prediction-markets

The power of prediction markets

Scientists are beginning to understand why these ‘mini Wall Streets’ work so well at forecasting election results — and how they sometimes fail.

Newsletter

The best science news from Nature and beyond, direct to your inbox every day.

The polling crisis

election-polling

How to tell what people really think

This year’s US presidential election is the toughest test yet for political polls as experts struggle to keep up with changing demographics and technology.

Mitochondrial replacement

mitochondrial-replacement

Reports of 'three-parent babies' multiply

Claims of infants created using mitochondrial-replacement techniques stir scientific and ethical debate.

US presidential race

Trump-supporters

The scientists who support Donald Trump

Science policy fades into background for many who back Republican candidate in US presidential race.

ExoMars

lost-mars-lander

Europe’s probe feared lost on Mars

Sister craft successfully enters Martian orbit but loses contact with Schiaparelli lander.

Nature Podcast

new-pod-red

Listen

This week, making egg cells in a dish, super-bright flares in nearby galaxies, and trying to predict the election.

Science jobs from naturejobs