2022
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-022-04520-5
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Towards a new paradigm for ‘journal quality’ criteria: a scoping review

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Cited by 11 publications

(4 citation statements)
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“…When responding to an uninvited email to submit to an unknown journal, potential authors are advised to use common and openly identifiable parameters to ascertain a journal's veracity (ISSN number, listing in JCR, publisher's unique name, and others), established and refined criteria to judge a journal's quality [20], as well as reevaluated blacklist criteria [16,17]. Further, the recipients of such emails should assess the content of published issues and the editorial board of a journal to assess whether fake or undeserving individuals serve as editors, journal website and publishing/ethics clauses to appreciate their completeness or weaknesses, and then make an objective judgement for themselves regarding the journal's legitimacy before they decide to submit to it.…”
Section: Authors Exercising Caution: Predatory Journals and Spammentioning
confidence: 99%
Exaggerated anticipatory anxiety is common in social anxiety disorder (SAD). Neuroimaging studies have revealed altered neural activity in response to social stimuli in SAD, but fewer studies have examined neural activity during anticipation of feared social stimuli in SAD. The current study examined the time course and magnitude of activity in threat processing brain regions during speech anticipation in socially anxious individuals and healthy controls (HC). Method Participants (SAD n = 58; HC n = 16) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during which they completed a 90s control anticipation task and 90s speech anticipation task.
“…When responding to an uninvited email to submit to an unknown journal, potential authors are advised to use common and openly identifiable parameters to ascertain a journal's veracity (ISSN number, listing in JCR, publisher's unique name, and others), established and refined criteria to judge a journal's quality [20], as well as reevaluated blacklist criteria [16,17]. Further, the recipients of such emails should assess the content of published issues and the editorial board of a journal to assess whether fake or undeserving individuals serve as editors, journal website and publishing/ethics clauses to appreciate their completeness or weaknesses, and then make an objective judgement for themselves regarding the journal's legitimacy before they decide to submit to it.…”
Section: Authors Exercising Caution: Predatory Journals and Spammentioning
confidence: 99%
Exaggerated anticipatory anxiety is common in social anxiety disorder (SAD). Neuroimaging studies have revealed altered neural activity in response to social stimuli in SAD, but fewer studies have examined neural activity during anticipation of feared social stimuli in SAD. The current study examined the time course and magnitude of activity in threat processing brain regions during speech anticipation in socially anxious individuals and healthy controls (HC). Method Participants (SAD n = 58; HC n = 16) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during which they completed a 90s control anticipation task and 90s speech anticipation task.
“…It provided a single "go-to" location and resource that gave a binary answer to our question. Even so, some academics have attempted to approach the issue via the refinement of predatory criteria [34,35,36,37,38,39], or scholarly criteria [40].…”
Section: How Do Academics Protect Themselves Against Predatory Publis...mentioning
confidence: 99%
Exaggerated anticipatory anxiety is common in social anxiety disorder (SAD). Neuroimaging studies have revealed altered neural activity in response to social stimuli in SAD, but fewer studies have examined neural activity during anticipation of feared social stimuli in SAD. The current study examined the time course and magnitude of activity in threat processing brain regions during speech anticipation in socially anxious individuals and healthy controls (HC). Method Participants (SAD n = 58; HC n = 16) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during which they completed a 90s control anticipation task and 90s speech anticipation task.
“…The significance of technology in the landscape of contemporary scholarly journals, both now and over the past decade, is evident (Ndungu, 2021). This is well presented in a scoping review on journal quality criteria (Moradzadeh et al, 2023), where the authors listed long list of aspects that should be considered when evaluating journal quality by its technical base.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is a wide range of characteristics expected from a scholarly journal website, which cannot be easily implemented using general website management software such as WordPress or similar platforms. Only professional and dedicated software designed for scholarly journals can offer the comprehensive range of features expected in a scholarly journal website (Moradzadeh et al, 2023).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
Exaggerated anticipatory anxiety is common in social anxiety disorder (SAD). Neuroimaging studies have revealed altered neural activity in response to social stimuli in SAD, but fewer studies have examined neural activity during anticipation of feared social stimuli in SAD. The current study examined the time course and magnitude of activity in threat processing brain regions during speech anticipation in socially anxious individuals and healthy controls (HC). Method Participants (SAD n = 58; HC n = 16) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during which they completed a 90s control anticipation task and 90s speech anticipation task.