Bentham Science Publishers

Bentham Science Publishers
Founded 1994
Country of origin United Arab Emirates
Headquarters location Sharjah
Publication types Scientific journals, e-books
Official website benthamscience.com

Bentham Science Publishers is a company that publishes scientific, technical, and medical journals and e-books. It publishes more than 100 subscription-based academic journals[1] and over 150 open access journals.[2] It is based at Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates,[1] and has operating units in the United States, Japan, China, India, and the Netherlands. More than 90 percent of the workforce is outsourced to Pakistan.[1] Other outsource operations are in China, UK, USA, India and other countries. Its open access branch, Bentham Open Science, has received attention for its questionable peer-review practices.

Publishing divisions

Bentham Science has three main operating divisions: subscription-based journals, open access titles, and e-books. They publish research literature in all areas of science, medicine, technology, humanities, and social sciences, which is available in both electronic and print versions.

Bentham Science publishes more than 100 subscription-based journals in the fields of biotechnology, biomedical, pharmaceuticals, technology, engineering, computer and social sciences. These titles are indexed in Scopus, Chemical Abstracts, MEDLINE, EMBASE, PubsHub, etc.

Bentham Open Access publishes more than 100 peer-reviewed, free-to-view online journals under Bentham Open. This imprint has been identified as a predatory publisher by Jeffrey Beall.[3]

Bentham eBooks publish text books, handbooks, monographs, biographies, autobiographies, conference proceedings and review volumes in the areas of medicine, technology, humanities, natural, and social sciences.

Controversies and criticism

Bentham Open journals claim to employ peer review;[4] however, the fact that a fake paper generated with SCIgen had been accepted for publication, has cast doubt on this.[5][6][7] Furthermore, the publisher is known for spamming scientists with invitations to become a member of the editorial boards of its journals.[8]

In 2009, the Bentham Open Science journal The Open Chemical Physics Journal published a study contending dust from the World Trade Center attacks contained "active nanothermite".[9] Following publication, the journal's editor-in-chief Marie-Paule Pileni resigned stating, "They have printed the article without my authorization… I have written to Bentham, that I withdraw myself from all activities with them".[10]

In a review of Bentham Open for The Charleston Advisor, Jeffrey Beall noted that "in many cases, Bentham Open journals publish articles that no legitimate peer-review journal would accept, and unconventional and nonconformist ideas are being presented in some of them as legitimate science." He concluded by stating that "the site has exploited the Open Access model for its own financial motives and flooded scholarly communication with a flurry of low quality and questionable research."[11] Beall has since added Bentham Open to his list of "Potential, possible, or probable predatory scholarly open-access publishers".[3]

In 2013, The Open Bioactive Compounds Journal was one of the journals that accepted an obviously bogus paper submitted as part of the Who's Afraid of Peer Review? sting.[12] It has since been discontinued.[13]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Bentham stays small for high impact". ACCESS – Asia's Newspaper on Electronic Information Product & Service (50). September 2004. Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2010-12-26.
  2. "Home page". Bentham Science Publishers. Retrieved 2010-12-26.
  3. 1 2 Beall, Jeffrey. "List of publishers". Scholarly Open Access. Retrieved 2014-12-28.
  4. "Bentham Open Home Page". Bentham Science Publishers Ltd. Retrieved 2010-07-29.
  5. "Chefredaktør skrider efter kontroversiel artikel om 9/11". Videnskab.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 2010-07-29.
  6. "CRAP paper accepted by journal – opinion – 11 June 2009". New Scientist. Retrieved 2010-07-29.
  7. "Editors quit after fake paper flap". The Scientist. Retrieved 2010-07-29./
  8. Some background on Bentham Open, but just some Peter Suber, Open Access News, April 24, 2008
  9. "Active Thermitic Material Discovered in Dust from the 9/11 World Trade Center Catastrophe". Open Chemical Physics Journal. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
  10. "Chefredaktør skrider efter kontroversiel artikel om 9/11". Vindeskab.dk. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
  11. Beall, Jeffrey (July 2009). "Bentham Open" (PDF). The Charleston Advisor. 11 (1): 29–32.
  12. "Data and Documents". 1 October 2016 via www.sciencemag.org.
  13. "The Open Bioactive Compounds Journal".

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.