====== 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.”