Junk Conferences / Spam Conferences / Spamferences / Academic Scams. Junk Conferences / Spam Conferences / Spamferences / Academic Scams ( T.Kovacz)
We received an email fromand we would like to write a post for the so called spamferences.
What is a spaference? What is a spamnal?
This post outlines the differences between good conferences, bad conferences and academic scams.
DEFINITION: Spamference is every conference that is promoted by Spam. The majority of IEEE conferences falls in this category.
DEFINITION: Spamnal is every journal that is promoted by Spam
Why would anyone organise a conference?
* To promote networking by researchers
* To generate funds for a non-profit organisation
* To focus attention on a particular area
* To promote the organisers’ reputations
* To make a profit for the organisers
Why attend a conference?
* To learn about the area
* To interact with other researchers
* To add a publication to your CV
* To have a holiday somewhere nice
Most of the motivations above are generally altruistic, but the last two in each list are not. Promoting the organisers’ reputations and adding to your CV are not necessarily bad; this is how academia works. However, these four motivations result in a lot of low-quality work being published.
Quality
If your motivation for attending a confernce is to have a holiday or to add (uncritically) to your CV the quality of the conference won′t matter much. In contrast, if you attend for the other reasons quality is a major concern. Imagine attending a conference and not making any useful contacts or coming across any good ideas: you would not have not gained much!
You might still consider this conference worthwhile because you got a publication out of it. After all, having publications may help impress your supervisor or thesis examiners or potential employers. Publications will also help your career as a scientist: you will be more likely to get funding, to be promoted, to attract students, to be invited to give talks and so on. However, quality is vital and there is a huge range in the quality of conferences and journals. These days it’s possible to get anything published. In fact, in the famous SCIgen affair a computer-generated nonsense paper was accepted by a conference. As a result, publications in themselves mean little; what matters is their quality. In fact, if you publish in low-quality conferences, or, worse, junk conferences, you will find this hurts your reputation more that it helps.Spam and junk conferences
A spam conference (or spamference) is one which is advertised with junk mail (spam). It is genuinely difficult to reach a large number of researchers in a particular area to advertise a conference, and some organisers of legitimate conferences are tempted into using junk mail. These conferences tend, however, to be lower quality ones, or new (or one-off) events which need to boost their attendence in this way. Well-established, high-quality conferences are well-known in their area and don’t need to resort to junk mail. These are the conferences which count most on your CV.
The conferences which send the most junk mail tend to be junk conferences, which have little or no academic value and are only run to make a profit for the oraganisers. Some researchers participate to get a free holiday and a publication but others participate in good faith, not realising the nature of the event. The point of this page is to ensure that you are not one of hem.
Where the money goes
Most conferences charge a fee for attendance which is put toward the cost of running the event. Some events also raise money for a non-profit organisation with which they are affiliated. The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence is an example of such an organisation, and it is a legitimate one, although I don’t know whether fees from their conferences contribute to the association.
Some conferences, especially larger ones, subcontract some of the non-academic organisational work. Many conferences, however, are organised entirely by volunteers, although there may be concessions to the main organisers such as free registration. Invited speakers generally get free registration, a contribution toward travel costs, and possibly an honorarium (a small payment). The details of these arrangements are not usually publicised and there is the potential for dubious use of funds, but as each incarnation of a particular conference series is generally organised by different people each year it is difficult for misuse of funds to persist.Although I see no reason why for-profit conferences cannot be of good quality there are a number of junk conferences which are run solely for profit, and where the quality of work is given little or no consideration.
Warning signs
* Here are some warning signs but note that bona fide conferences may show some of these warning signs; in particular many reputable conferences are held in nice places.
1) The conference is advertised using spam
(The IEEE Spam Conferences have this sign)
2) The conference has the same chair every year. (Bona fide conferences may have the same people on an executive committee for many years, but probably not the same chair.)
(The IASTED Conferences have this sign)
3) The call for papers emphasises repeatedly that it is a “reputable” conference with many “famous experts″
(The IEEE Spam Conferences have this sign)
4) The call for papers, and subject of the conference, is very general
(The IEEE Bogus Conferences have this sign)
5) The chair has chaired dozens of other conferences but probably has few good publications and does not work at a reputable institution
6) Many logotypes (IEEE, etc…) exist on the leaflet or on the web site
7) The conference is in a very nice place
Many IEEE Conferences have this bad sign
You are invited by a stranger to organise a special session (even in an IEEE Conference) or to undertake some other activity for the conference which would normally require some stature in the area, when you in fact do not have this stature.
For example if you are a PhD student it’s unlikely you will be asked by a stranger to take a high-profile role. Having said that, invitations to serve on a programme committee are not that uncommon or that high-profile, and advertising for special session proposals is fine as long as they’re not automatically accepted.
Open access journal scams (Fortunately the IEEE journals: The IEEE Transactions ARE NOT in this category)
Recently open-access journals have begun to appear. These journals provide free access to readers on the web and charge authors to publish. This is a big improvement over the traditional model of subscribing to journals since it makes results freely available to all. However, it allows for a new type of scam.
In August 2008 I was invited to join the editorial board of a journal, which is normally quite an honour. I work in the area of the journal but didn’t recognise the editor and decided to check him out on the web before replying. It soon turned out this was an open access journal scam, which was new to me. The “publisher” was in fact a single individual at a private address who was attempting to recruit academics to serve on his various editorial boards in an attempt to make them look legitimate and so attract others to the editorial boards and to submit papers. This is what a major publisher does when setting up a new journal, but a major publisher has the resources to do this properly (remember the section on quality!). This individual appeared to be working on his own and apparently is not affiliated with any insitution and doesn’t even have a degree. This is something like trying to pass yourself off as a doctor without having gone to medical school.
References:
1) via the web the article:
Junk Conferences / Spam Conferences / Spamferences / Academic Scams. Junk Conferences / Spam Conferences / Spamferences / Academic Scams
of Tim Kovacz. October 2008.