Science discussions of retracted articles on Bluesky: public scrutiny or misinformation spreading?
Er-Te Zheng, Hui-Zhen Fu, Xiaorui Jiang, Zhichao Fang, Mike Thelwall

TL;DR
This study analyzes Bluesky social media posts about retracted scientific articles, finding that most discussions demonstrate good practices like acknowledging retractions, especially after retraction occurs, supporting responsible scientific communication.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of Bluesky discussions on retracted articles, highlighting the prevalence of good practices over bad practices in public scrutiny.
Findings
89.9% of posts showed good practice, outnumbering bad practice posts.
Good practice posts had higher user engagement.
Post-retraction discussions predominantly reflected good practices (94.2%).
Abstract
Post-publication peer review (PPPR) has emerged as an important supplement to traditional peer review, with social media playing a growing role in publicising potential problems in published research. However, it remains unclear whether social media discussions of retracted articles primarily reflect good practices, such as exposing flaws and acknowledging retraction status, or bad practices, such as overlooking retractions and continuing to disseminate scientific misinformation. In this study, we collected Bluesky posts referencing scholarly articles from Altmetric and retrieved metadata for the referenced articles using OpenAlex. The final dataset included 284 retracted articles with 79 pre-retraction posts and 857 post-retraction posts, 59 retraction notices with 186 posts, and 609,461 non-retracted articles with 1,344,756 posts. We manually coded Bluesky posts discussing retracted…
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