Secondary corrections
Secondary corrections
What is this about?
Why is this important?
For whom is this important?
What are the best practices?
Researchers should be up-to-date in their field of interest and, when they notice a retraction of an article that they have previously cited, correct the article. The easiest way to be regularly updated on retractions is by following Retraction Watch and their database [2]. Zotero citation manager has established a partnership with Retraction Watch and has implemented retraction notifications that pop-up when an article from the users’ database has been retracted. Hopefully other citation managers will follow this practice.
An initiative to stimulate this kind of behavior could result in more corrected articles. In practice, taking into account the number of articles that are published every day, it is hard to expect an individual to notice everything. The ideal practice would be that the journal which has retracted the article, notifies authors which have cited the retracted article. However, that is hard to be expected, especially for older articles. Alternately, authors of the retracted article could inform all the authors who have cited their article. This may be expected from authors whose article is retracted due to unintentional mistake and have initiated the retraction, but it might be illusory to expect this from authors who have committed fabrication, plagiarism, or similar misconduct.Giulia Inguaggiato, Jakov Matas contributed to this theme. Latest contribution was Sep 28, 2022
Other information
- ↑ NLM. Errata, Retractions, and Other Linked Citations in PubMed. Available from: https://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/policy/errata.html [Accessed 12 February 2021].
- ↑ Retraction Watch. Available from: https://retractionwatch.com/ [Accessed 17 February 2021].