How to detect predatory journals?
Short answer
Check the journal against Beall's List, verify its DOAJ listing, use the Think Check Submit checklist, and look for red flags: aggressive solicitation emails, unrealistic acceptance timelines, fake impact factors, and missing editorial board information. LancetClaw helps organize those checks into one workflow.
Execution Steps
- 1Check Beall's List for the journal or publisher name.
- 2Verify DOAJ listing status at doaj.org.
- 3Use the Think Check Submit checklist (thinkchecksubmit.org).
- 4Look for red flags: aggressive emails, fast acceptance, fake metrics, hidden fees.
- 5Use LancetClaw predatory journal checker for automated assessment.
Prompt Template
Evaluate whether [journal name] is a predatory journal. Check Beall's List, DOAJ status, editorial board, peer review process, and any red flags.
Common Failure Points
- Assuming a journal is legitimate because it has an Impact Factor (fake IFs exist)
- Submitting just because you received an unsolicited email invitation
- Not checking the editorial board (fake or non-existent boards are a major red flag)
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