Characterizing the effect of retractions on scientific careers

06/11/2023
by   Shahan Ali Memon, et al.
0

Retracting academic papers is a fundamental tool of quality control when the validity of papers or the integrity of authors is questioned post-publication. While retractions do not completely eliminate papers from the record, they have far-reaching consequences for retracted authors and their careers, serving as a visible and permanent signal of potential transgressions. Previous studies have highlighted the adverse effects of retractions on citation counts and co-authors' citations; however, the underlying mechanisms driving these effects and the broader impacts beyond these traditional metrics have not been fully explored. We address this gap leveraging Retraction Watch, the most extensive data set on retractions and link it to Microsoft Academic Graph, a comprehensive data set of scientific publications and their citation networks, and Altmetric that monitors online attention to scientific output. Our investigation focuses on: 1) the likelihood of authors exiting scientific publishing following retraction, and 2) the evolution of collaboration networks among authors who continue publishing after retraction. Our empirical analysis reveals that retracted authors, particularly those with less experience, tend to leave scientific publishing in the aftermath of retraction, particularly if their retractions attract widespread attention. Furthermore, we uncover a pattern whereby retracted authors who remain active in publishing tend to maintain and establish more collaborations compared to their similar non-retracted counterparts. Taken together, notwithstanding the indispensable role of retractions in upholding the integrity of the academic community, our findings shed light on the disproportionate impact that retractions impose on early-career researchers as opposed to those with more established careers.

READ FULL TEXT

page 18

page 33

research
08/04/2023

Hyperauthored papers disproportionately amplify important egocentric network metrics

Hyperauthorship, a phenomenon whereby there are a disproportionately lar...
research
07/26/2022

Academic Co-authorship is a Risky Game

Conducting a research project with multiple participants is a complex ta...
research
01/11/2019

Exploring the Role of Interdisciplinarity in Physics: Success, Talent and Luck

Although interdisciplinarity is often touted as a necessity for modern r...
research
08/03/2023

Relational hyperevent models for the coevolution of coauthoring and citation networks

Interest in the network analysis of bibliographic data has increased sig...
research
07/03/2023

Editors handle their collaborators' submissions despite explicit policies

Editors are crucial to the integrity of the scientific publishing proces...
research
04/12/2023

Do "bad" citations have "good" effects?

The scientific community discourages authors of research papers from cit...
research
06/16/2017

Big Missing Data: are scientific memes inherited differently from gendered authorship?

This paper seeks to build upon the previous literature on gender aspects...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset