====== Journal Padding ====== **Definition:** *Journal padding* refers to the editorial practice of increasing the number of published articles in a scientific journal by including **redundant, low-impact, or fragmentary content** that lacks genuine academic value. ===== Characteristics ===== * Serial publication of content that could be condensed into a single article. * Preference for commemorative, anecdotal, or descriptive pieces over original research. * Recycling of well-known material without critical reanalysis. * Tolerance of poor methodological or editorial standards. * Favoritism towards institutional contributors or editorial board members. ===== Red Flags ===== ^ Symptom ^ Consequence ^ | Multi-part series with superficial depth | Inflates volume without adding substance | | Lack of new data or original argument | Wastes journal space and reader attention | | Editorial self-promotion | Compromises objectivity and credibility | | Low citation potential | Undermines the journal's academic reputation | ===== Consequences ===== * Erosion of scientific integrity. * Dilution of academic standards. * Reader fatigue and reduced trust in the journal. * Artificial inflation of editorial metrics (e.g., article count, visibility). ===== Related Terms ===== * Academic inflation * Editorial bias * Low-impact publishing ===== Application Example ===== * The five-part historical series on Academic Neurosurgery in ''Neurocirugía (Engl Ed)'' could be interpreted as a case of journal padding, as it stretches limited historical insight over multiple articles with redundant structure and minimal methodological rigor.