Fantastic news! Congratulations Iryna.
A marvelous addition and unique perspective to add to the COPE Council.
Posts by Duncan Nicholas
I don’t just mean in academia (where I will also acknowledge the term ‘fraud’ has an extra weight of implication), but in general, in every creative application of slopbots
Ok, I’ll go half’s and agree on misconduct, because it’s also true, but it’s still fraud, because these LLMs are just fraud engines.
I don’t think it helps to pretend they are not, and especially not use anthropomorphised cutesy words like ‘hallucinate’ (which is sleight of hand to bury the lede)
Right?! It’s remarkable that people - publishers, journal editors - are approaching ‘hallucinations’ (a cutesy word for fraud) as something that can be tidied up with some post acceptance checks
Instead of being a screaming red flag, on submission, that the authors have fabricated their article
Absolutely superb session tonight. Fascinating talks and fantastic speakers.
Will have the video up on the RBMO youtube channel in a week or so.
if you have nay interest in public health family planning, fertility and population demographics, this will be for you.
Some clips in this thread >>>
I am looking forward to this.
The EASE Summer Symposium is starting to take shape. It is going to be a superb event, with some choice sessions over several days - and this satellite event to get things off to an early start!
Olivia always on the sharpest point
Polanski’s responses in this interview are absolute class.
The Sky presenters coming from a place of incredibly aggressive bad faith, dealt with in the way we always dream of such disingenuous and biased questioning being deal with.
Journal editors and publishers, do check out this course!
There are few, if any, quite like it; comprehensive, interactive and very practical.
Another interesting article of scientific and social advances from RBMO today!
Among other aspects, it touches on the way IVF technology is assisting space research, which in turn provides new information for IVF tech and treatments on Earth.
this is 100% right.
Glad to be seeing a lot more of these more sober sensible takes so far this year.
Now to go to LinkedIn to give this a bump there too, where it is even more sorely needed than here.
Insert *Pretends to be shocked* meme
It is baffling that anyone is still there. They should have all left years ago, when it was clear that staying on it was only support for it as a far right propaganda tool.
Discussing and applying are two entirely discrete actions, surely?
The galaxy brained understanderer had logged on
Adding this to my toolbar for quick reference. I don’t expect I’ll be the first to notice such things in any papers, but I’ll keep it to hand just in case.
It is very noticeable, and I do very much care.
You will lose my interest and confidence in a nanosecond.
Good to see this article has a cautionary note already. I expect it will be retracted in due course.
Shocking that this has made it to publication.
It does not help, of course, that publishers keep hemming and hawing around GenAI instead of shutting it down. Mixed messages only invite this stuff.
What a company.
This is indeed who you’re supporting when you use ChatGPT.
‘Token karaoke’ and ‘hobo tech’ are great
A lot of very useful and detailed resources for everyone from the novice to seasoned (and jaded) peer reviewer!
A table showing profit margins of major publishers. A snippet of text related to this table is below. 1. The four-fold drain 1.1 Money Currently, academic publishing is dominated by profit-oriented, multinational companies for whom scientific knowledge is a commodity to be sold back to the academic community who created it. The dominant four are Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley and Taylor & Francis, which collectively generated over US$7.1 billion in revenue from journal publishing in 2024 alone, and over US$12 billion in profits between 2019 and 2024 (Table 1A). Their profit margins have always been over 30% in the last five years, and for the largest publisher (Elsevier) always over 37%. Against many comparators, across many sectors, scientific publishing is one of the most consistently profitable industries (Table S1). These financial arrangements make a substantial difference to science budgets. In 2024, 46% of Elsevier revenues and 53% of Taylor & Francis revenues were generated in North America, meaning that North American researchers were charged over US$2.27 billion by just two for-profit publishers. The Canadian research councils and the US National Science Foundation were allocated US$9.3 billion in that year.
A figure detailing the drain on researcher time. 1. The four-fold drain 1.2 Time The number of papers published each year is growing faster than the scientific workforce, with the number of papers per researcher almost doubling between 1996 and 2022 (Figure 1A). This reflects the fact that publishers’ commercial desire to publish (sell) more material has aligned well with the competitive prestige culture in which publications help secure jobs, grants, promotions, and awards. To the extent that this growth is driven by a pressure for profit, rather than scholarly imperatives, it distorts the way researchers spend their time. The publishing system depends on unpaid reviewer labour, estimated to be over 130 million unpaid hours annually in 2020 alone (9). Researchers have complained about the demands of peer-review for decades, but the scale of the problem is now worse, with editors reporting widespread difficulties recruiting reviewers. The growth in publications involves not only the authors’ time, but that of academic editors and reviewers who are dealing with so many review demands. Even more seriously, the imperative to produce ever more articles reshapes the nature of scientific inquiry. Evidence across multiple fields shows that more papers result in ‘ossification’, not new ideas (10). It may seem paradoxical that more papers can slow progress until one considers how it affects researchers’ time. While rewards remain tied to volume, prestige, and impact of publications, researchers will be nudged away from riskier, local, interdisciplinary, and long-term work. The result is a treadmill of constant activity with limited progress whereas core scholarly practices – such as reading, reflecting and engaging with others’ contributions – is de-prioritized. What looks like productivity often masks intellectual exhaustion built on a demoralizing, narrowing scientific vision.
A table of profit margins across industries. The section of text related to this table is below: 1. The four-fold drain 1.1 Money Currently, academic publishing is dominated by profit-oriented, multinational companies for whom scientific knowledge is a commodity to be sold back to the academic community who created it. The dominant four are Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley and Taylor & Francis, which collectively generated over US$7.1 billion in revenue from journal publishing in 2024 alone, and over US$12 billion in profits between 2019 and 2024 (Table 1A). Their profit margins have always been over 30% in the last five years, and for the largest publisher (Elsevier) always over 37%. Against many comparators, across many sectors, scientific publishing is one of the most consistently profitable industries (Table S1). These financial arrangements make a substantial difference to science budgets. In 2024, 46% of Elsevier revenues and 53% of Taylor & Francis revenues were generated in North America, meaning that North American researchers were charged over US$2.27 billion by just two for-profit publishers. The Canadian research councils and the US National Science Foundation were allocated US$9.3 billion in that year.
The costs of inaction are plain: wasted public funds, lost researcher time, compromised scientific integrity and eroded public trust. Today, the system rewards commercial publishers first, and science second. Without bold action from the funders we risk continuing to pour resources into a system that prioritizes profit over the advancement of scientific knowledge.
We wrote the Strain on scientific publishing to highlight the problems of time & trust. With a fantastic group of co-authors, we present The Drain of Scientific Publishing:
a 🧵 1/n
Drain: arxiv.org/abs/2511.04820
Strain: direct.mit.edu/qss/article/...
Oligopoly: direct.mit.edu/qss/article/...
We are excited to reveal the first of our plans towards our next online conference.
Help us choose the theme for conference sessions by voting for your favorite from three shortlisted options suggested by our Council.
bit.ly/ease2026poll
A magnificent and most-needed paper
This survey will help us better understand
- global activity around board management,
- policies and processes for managing Ed Boards;
- public information on role profiles and requirements;
- regularity of performance reviews
and more
Please do take the time to provide your experiences
Catch up with the latest EASE news, valuable resources for Editors and Peer Reviewers, recent publications from European Science Editing and more, in the bi-monthly newsletter, EASE Update.
completely unacceptable to force people to click the thieving plagiarism slop box
But again, perhaps another signal from publishers their complaints about 'piracy' have not been serious all along, and everyone should be SciHubbing to their hearts content.
I do really like Zoom as a platform, but the recordings are getting increasingly worse for having out of sync audio and video. little slow-downs in the video make it impossible to correct, it's so weirdly warped.
It takes a lot of editing to cover over, and/or makes the recordings look so bad.
Calling all journal editors and managers interested in refreshing your strategies and updating approaches and skills to running your journals!
The EASE Editor School starts in 1st October with extremely insightful and experienced trainers who know their game
Full details in the link
👇🏽
New Lamp track just dropped.
Album of the year incoming, if you’re into grandiose Satyricon style epics of rabid animalism.
youtu.be/F8rcY_1d-mo?...