Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Low-Yield Publication ====== A low-yield [[publication]] refers to a scientific article that offers minimal new knowledge, clinical relevance, or scientific advancement, despite being peer-reviewed and indexed. These publications may technically meet formal criteria (abstract, case, conclusion), but contribute little or nothing to the evidence base, teaching, or practice improvement. 🧠Common Features of Low-Yield Publications: Redundant case reports – e.g., “another meningioma resection with no complication” Obvious conclusions – restating what is already established in guidelines or textbooks Lack of novelty – no new technique, biomarker, interpretation, or hypothesis Methodological shallowness – small sample sizes, no controls, no stats Self-congratulatory tone – celebrating basic procedural success as innovation Poor generalizability – conclusions cannot be applied outside the specific case 🔥 Critical View in Academia Low-yield publications contribute to: Scientific noise and database inflation CV padding without academic impact Citation pollution, cluttering literature reviews Editorial drift, where journals prioritize volume over quality ❗ “Just because it’s indexed doesn’t mean it’s meaningful.” low-yield_publication.txt Last modified: 2025/06/20 16:56by administrador