I’m been trying to expanding to my scientific literacy and that has involved looking at articles in scientific journals; i.e. the peer-reviewed literature. However, not all journals are trust-worthy. I would like to believe that academic search engines like Google Scholar would filter out “junk science” articles that I can’t rely on that always happening. So how do I spot “predatory” or “pseudo-journals”?

Sometimes, it’s quite obvious: “Answers Research Journal” makes it clear that they exist for creationist confirmation bias. This, however, isn’t always the case.

I also can’t always rely on a publication’s reputation. In that oh-so famous example, Andrew Wakefield exploited The Lancet’s venerable reputation to publish a fraudulent study with consequences that still reverberate to this day.

Thanks in advance.

  • @huquad@lemmy.ml
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    1115 days ago

    Find a topic. Search for papers. Look at the journals the papers/citations are written in. It’ll be overwhelming clear which 2 or 3 journals dominate the space.