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Chimera readability score 60 out of 100, Graduate reading level.

If your week flew by — we know ours did — catch up here with what you might have missed.
The week at Retraction Watch featured:
- Ethics journal retracts paper by high school student for AI, peer review manipulation
- Former acting director of national lab in India up to nine retractions
- Springer Nature has restored two papers by Max Planck, reversing a 2011 decision to retract the articles
- Judge dismisses Splenda lawsuit, says courts wrong place for research debate
- Exclusive: Sage to retract multiple articles by dismissed rising star for “compromised” peer-review process
- ‘The exploitation still remains’: Stats journal associate editors resign over $3,000 publishing charge
In case you missed the news, the Hijacked Journal Checker now has more than 450 entries. The Retraction Watch Database has over 65,000 retractions. Our list of COVID-19 retractions is up to 650, and our mass resignations list has more than 50 entries. We keep tabs on all this and more. If you value this work, please consider showing your support with a tax-deductible donation. Every dollar counts.
Here’s what was happening elsewhere (some of these items may be paywalled, metered access, or require free registration to read):
- “Neuropathologist not guilty of research misconduct, says university probe.”
- “When Editors Revolt: Characterizing Journal Declarations of Independence.”
- “University walks back study on Waffle House workers.” More on the study here.
- Two liver transplant studies retracted over organ harvesting concerns. Of 400 such studies flagged in 2019, only dozens have been retracted.
- Biomedical papers that were never posted as preprints retracted at “twice the rate as those that were,” preprint finds.
- Preprint finds 22% of papers in ten biomedical fields cite authors with at least one retracted article.
- “Philosophers call for their journals to require conflict of interest disclosures.”
- Conflicts of interest are a “relatively uncommon” reason for journals to retract or correct papers, especially when COI is the only issue, study finds.
- Assistant professors accused of publication fraud for “allegedly duping” colleague into publishing in fake journals.
- “Publication integrity and industry influences on the editorial process: a case study” of a series of articles from the journal Anesthesiology. The case involved a lawsuit. “How cheap AI is undermining Indonesia’s academic credibility.” And “Paper Mills, AI-Assisted Citation Fabrication, and the Integrity of Indonesia’s Research Evidence Base.”
- “Cloned journals signal the rise of academic cybercrime.”
- “How paper mills go straight (without going clean): a shift to dual-use services.”
- “The APC Trap and the bind of scholarly publishing across four research intensive institutions in the U.S.”
- Analysis highlights “an estimated US$41.9 million in article processing charges (APCs) collected by publishers for research that was later retracted.”
- “Science is being polluted at a rapid pace,” thanks to generative LLMs.
- “Twenty-one years of coexistence: a comparative analysis of disciplinary and regional journal coverage in Web of Science and Scopus.”
- “Reclassification of basic experimental studies in humans — a case for a new publishing consensus.”
- An official at the Russian Academy of Sciences has proposed a unified registry of retractions. We know of one.
- “Metadata Falsificada: The Cover-Up File in Gino v. Harvard.”
- “Behind China’s retractions, a paper-mill economy built on incentives.” And “China trial retractions put data transparency in spotlight.”
- “[E]ven when corrections exist, they can be hard to discover and may disappear when records propagate across platforms.”
- “Broken citation or academic misconduct? How to spot the difference.”
- “‘Humanizer’ tool can erase signs of AI-written text — alarming scientists.”
- “AI tools meant to vet science are surprisingly easy to fool.”
- “Modern nonsense science looks very professional on the outside.”
- “Decapitalizing scientific knowledge and making it accessible to all: solutions exist.” And “What Do Scientists Think About Open Access Publishing?”
- Researchers propose a LLM pipeline for scoring citation quality, which they say could assist with peer review.
- “China cools on overseas publication of scientific research.”
- “The Challenges of Scientific Publishing: An Editor-In-Chief’s Perspective.”
- “Tackle ‘weak’ enforcement of data sharing rules, journals told: ‘Data transparency crisis’ in research stems from failure to police mandates on sharing results, researchers argue.”
- “The planned closure of Research Professional News is a loss for the sector.”
Like Retraction Watch? You can make a tax-deductible contribution to support our work, follow us on X or Bluesky, like us on Facebook, follow us on LinkedIn, add us to your RSS reader, or subscribe to our daily digest. If you find a retraction that’s not in our database, you can let us know here. For comments or feedback, email us at [email protected].
Hello,
Can you please flag the featured items that are behind a paywall? Although I spend too much on subscriptions to news and science sites, there is still a large proportion of your links that I am unable to access and it’s annoying to be enticed into clicking on an item that I am unable to read.
Best regards,
John (long time reader and supporter)

Facts Only

Ethics journal retracted a paper by a high school student concerning AI and peer review manipulation.
A former acting director of a national lab in India had up to nine retractions.
Springer Nature restored two papers by Max Planck, reversing a 2011 retraction decision.
A judge dismissed a Splenda lawsuit, stating courts are not the appropriate venue for research debate.
Sage will retract multiple articles by a dismissed rising star due to a "compromised" peer-review process.
The Stats journal associate editors resigned over $3,000 publishing charges.
COVID-19 retractions number up to 650 in the database.
A list of mass resignations has over 50 entries.
An estimated US$41.9 million in APCs were collected by publishers for retracted research.
Some biomedical papers that were never posted as preprints were retracted at a rate double that of those that were.
Twenty-two percent of papers in ten biomedical fields cite authors with at least one retracted article.

Executive Summary

The content summarizes recent significant actions and findings related to the integrity of scientific publishing, particularly concerning retractions, peer review processes, and conflicts of interest. Specific events mentioned include the retraction of a paper by a high school student regarding AI and peer review manipulation, multiple retractions involving a former acting director from a national lab in India, and the restoration of two papers by Max Planck. Legal and institutional actions are also noted, such as a judge dismissing a lawsuit concerning research debate and resignations by associate editors over publishing charges. The broader context points to systemic issues involving publication integrity, the influence of AI on science, the role of journal policies regarding conflicts of interest, and the economics of publishing, including Article Processing Charges (APCs) and the existence of paper mills.

Full Take

The narrative highlights a fracturing of trust within the academic publishing ecosystem, driven by concerns over integrity, technological influence, and economic incentives. The sequence of events—from specific misconduct cases involving students and former directors to broader systemic issues like AI's role in science and the economics of APCs—suggests an interplay between individual failures and institutional vulnerabilities. A critical pattern emerging is the tension between established scholarly processes and new disruptive forces, such as generative AI, which are introducing novel forms of opacity ("Modern nonsense science looks very professional on the outside"). The simultaneous focus on data transparency (retractions, sharing mandates) and financial pressures (APCs, paper mills) implies that accountability mechanisms are being overwhelmed by competing economic and technological flows. The implication is that cognitive sovereignty requires not just correcting individual errors but establishing robust, transparent structural rules for knowledge dissemination that can withstand both academic rivalry and external technological infiltration. The missing inquiry is what concrete institutional shifts will occur when the system must simultaneously police human conduct, manage technological risk, and adhere to financial structures.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text reads like an internal newsletter or update from a specific publication, using a personal voice to compile links related to academic retraction and AI integrity issues.

Signals Detected
low severity: Irregular sentence length and informal conversational opening ('If your week flew by — we know ours did').
low severity: Clear, albeit advocacy-driven, structure presenting a list of news items and concluding with a call to action. Exhibits distinct editorial voice.
low severity: The grouping of disparate but thematically related topics suggests human curation rather than machine aggregation, especially the focus on academic integrity issues.
low severity: The specific list of featured items and associated statistics appear to reference real-world concepts (e.g., Retraction Watch, APCs) which implies grounding in actual reporting.
Human Indicators
Personalized appeal ('we know ours did'), direct solicitation for donations, and a distinct conversational tone suggest human authorship focused on engagement.
Weekend reads: Neuroscientist found not guilty of misconduct; when editors revolt; a Waffle House study walkback — Arc Codex