Journal: Learned Publishing

Volume 37, Issue 2

72 -- 88David J. Clark, David Nicholas, Eti Herman, Abdullah Abrizah, Anthony Watkinson, Blanca Rodríguez Bravo, Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Marzena Swigon, Jie Xu 0005, Hamid R. Jamali 0001, David Sims, Galina Serbina. WhatsApp - what's that?
89 -- 97Maria S. Plakhotnik. How do editors use editorials to lead their journals? Insights from the field of human resource management
98 -- 108Li Jiagui, Johnny F. I. Lam. Macao's academic book publishing industry: A SWOT and PEST analysis
109 -- 116Alexander Burrell, Daniel Butler, Obioha C. Ukoumunne, Hajira Dambha-Miller. Exploring the relationship between traditional bibliometrics and Altmetric scores in the primary care literature
117 -- 124Heinz Pampel, Antonia Schrader, Paul Vierkant, Britta Dreyer, Stephanie Glagla-Dietz, Jochen Schirrwagen, Friedrich Summann. Lessons learned from ORCID DE - A project-driven initiative to promote author identification in Germany
125 -- 129Ciaran Hoogendoorn, Gaynor Redvers-Mutton. Scaling up open access publishing through transformative agreements: Results from 2019 to 2022
130 -- 138Xiangdong Li. Alternatives to English only in scholarly publishing: Emerging trends of language policies among non-Anglophone journals?
139 -- 146John Willinsky, Daniel R. Pimentel. The publication facts label: A public and professional guide for research articles
147 -- 153Robin Dunford, Bruce Rosenblum, Sylvia Hunter. Using automated analysis of the bibliography to detect potential research integrity issues
154 -- 156Aron Laxdal, Tommy Haugen. Where are the carrots? A proposal to start crediting peer reviewers for their contribution to science
157 -- 158Karukh K. Mohammed, Jihad Ibrahim Hama, Fahmi H. Kakamad. Beyond Beall's list: The need for contemporary evaluation tools in predatory publishing research

Volume 37, Issue 1

4 -- 12Kayvan Kousha, Mike Thelwall. Artificial intelligence to support publishing and peer review: A summary and review
13 -- 21Brady D. Lund, K. T. Naheem. Can ChatGPT be an author? A study of artificial intelligence authorship policies in top academic journals
22 -- 29Agata Piekniewska, Laurel L. Haak, Darla Henderson, Katherine McNeill 0001, Anita E. Bandrowski, Yvette Seger. Establishing an early indicator for data sharing and reuse
30 -- 38Joan E. Dodgson, Ethan T. Bamberger, Zelalem T. Haile, Mary Kate J. Kornegay. Editorial actions taken to reduce publishing references from predatory sources: A case study
39 -- 43Daniel Stockemer, Theresa Reidy. International Political Science Review
44 -- 48Rajadurai Vijay Solomon. Breaking free from academic scams: Five key reflections on the cloned journal conundrum
49 -- 54Harini Calamur, Roohi Ghosh. Adapting peer review for the future: Digital disruptions and trust in peer review
55 -- 62Graham Kendall, Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva. Risks of abuse of large language models, like ChatGPT, in scientific publishing: Authorship, predatory publishing, and paper mills
63 -- 65Pascal Hetzscholdt. Is AI giving us more than we can or even should handle?
66 -- 68Sami Benchekroun. The robot uprising is here: Is scholarly publishing ready?