Duplicate Publication and 'Paper Inflation' in the Fractals Literature

Abstract

The similarity of documents in a large database of published Fractals articles was examined for redundancy. Three different text matching techniques were used on published Abstracts to identify redundancy candidates, and predictions were verified by reading full text versions of the redundancy candidate articles. A small fraction of the total articles in the database was judged to be redundant. This was viewed as a lower limit, because it excluded cases where the concepts remained the same, but the text was altered substantially. Far more pervasive than redundant publications were publications that did not violate the letter of redundancy but rather violated the spirit of redundancy. There appeared to be widespread publication maximization strategies. Studies that resulted in one comprehensive paper decades ago now result in multiple papers that focus on one major problem, but are differentiated by parameter ranges, or other stratifying variables. This "paper inflation" is due in large part to the increasing use of metrics (publications, patents, citations, etc) to evaluate research performance, and the researchers' motivation to maximize the metrics.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2005
Accession Number
ADA440622

Entities

People

  • Dustin Johnson
  • Guido Malpohl
  • J. A. Del Rio
  • Louis A. Bloomfield
  • Michael F. Shlesinger
  • Ronald Neil Kostoff

Organizations

  • Office of Naval Research

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Materials and Manufacturing Processes

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Algorithms
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Biological Sciences
  • Computational Science
  • Computer Science
  • Data Compression
  • Data Mining
  • Databases
  • Engineering
  • Information Processing
  • Information Retrieval
  • Information Science
  • Knowledge Management
  • Literature
  • Pattern Recognition
  • Social Sciences
  • Text Mining

Readers

  • Applied Combinatorial Optimization and Logic Circuit Design.
  • Economics
  • Library and Information Science