Ask HN: I met a “two papers per month” guy at last. Legit?
As a borderline scientist turned applied engineer, I have also wondered how many papers a skilled and devoted scientist could get published when taking that endeavor at heart. Of course, I’m talking neither small team superstars nor big labs and consortia. And then, here he came: one guy asked me for advice while preparing to submit a paper in my primary field to a well-respected journal. Nothing transcendental, still… this guy has being putting out one hundred and twenty accepted contributions in the last five years, in a number of diverse fields, and some with a seemingly legit number of citations. My question to you HNers comes as follows: is this a new scam? Is this a new job, sort of paper factories? Are these results legit or artificial? I know counterfeiting is all over the publishing industry, these days. I am going to decline his advice request, yet could we discuss what’s happening there, if anything? Thanks and happy 2022 all!
6 comments
[ 0.29 ms ] story [ 27.9 ms ] threadWithout actual details, there’s nothing to really discuss. Surely you can look up some of his papers and read them, right?
Usually people churning out papers aren’t writing anything substantial in most of them. Could be plagiarizing other papers, in which case you could probably figure it out with some targeted searching.
But it should go without saying that he’s probably not actually making a breakthrough every other week like clockwork. If he brags about volume of publishing first but not really about what he’s studying, you probably have your answer.
For example it looks the (in)famous Didier Raoult was cited as author (on average) in publications at least every three days in the last 10 years:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=Raoult+Didier+marseill...
Eg, in some parts of public health research and medicine you get your name on a paper by being the source of the data, whether you do any work or not.
Alternatively, you might put your name on everything any grad student in your lab produces.
There are also field-specific effects which push numbers up or down: it is easy to publish in medicine since there are so many journals and many do not have high standards (some do, but many do more).
In good journals in economics it is not uncommon for papers to spend years in the referee process so total publication numbers are low. (Bad journals in economics have much lower standards.)
That said, two papers a month is setting off my bullshit alarms - I'd take a hard look at those papers and just see if he's solving real problems or not.