Quantifying the distribution of editorial power and manuscript decision bias at the mega-journal PLOS ONE
Alexander M. Petersen

TL;DR
This study analyzes the distribution of editorial power and biases at PLOS ONE over a decade, revealing high inequality, potential conflicts of interest, and their influence on article impact and acceptance times.
Contribution
It introduces novel editor-specific measures and models to quantify power, bias, and conflicts of interest in a large-scale journal setting.
Findings
High power inequality among editors, with top editors responsible for 2.4% of articles.
Social ties and self-citations significantly influence editorial decisions.
Bias effects increase with editor age, indicating evolving misconduct tendencies.
Abstract
We analyzed the longitudinal activity of nearly 7,000 editors at the mega-journal PLOS ONE over the 10-year period 2006-2015. Using the article-editor associations, we develop editor-specific measures of power, activity, article acceptance time, citation impact, and editorial renumeration (an analogue to self-citation). We observe remarkably high levels of power inequality among the PLOS ONE editors, with the top-10 editors responsible for 3,366 articles -- corresponding to 2.4% of the 141,986 articles we analyzed. Such high inequality levels suggest the presence of unintended incentives, which may reinforce unethical behavior in the form of decision-level biases at the editorial level. Our results indicate that editors may become apathetic in judging the quality of articles and susceptible to modes of power-driven misconduct. We used the longitudinal dimension of editor activity to…
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Taxonomy
Topicsscientometrics and bibliometrics research · Climate Change Communication and Perception · Academic Publishing and Open Access
