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Taking it back: A pilot study of a rubric measuring retraction notice quality.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Shi, A; Bier, B; Price, C; Schwartz, L; Wainright, D; Whithaus, A; Abritis, A; Oransky, I; Angrist, M
Published in: Accountability in research
August 2025

The frequency of scientific retractions has grown substantially in recent years. However, thus far there is no standardized retraction notice format to which journals and their publishers adhere voluntarily, let alone compulsorily. We developed a rubric specifying seven criteria in order to judge whether retraction notices are easily and freely accessible, informative, and transparent. We mined the Retraction Watch database and evaluated a total of 768 retraction notices from two publishers (Springer and Wiley) over three years (2010, 2015, and 2020). Per our rubric, both publishers tended to score higher on measures of openness/availability, accessibility, and clarity as to why a paper was retracted than they did in: acknowledging institutional investigations; confirming whether there was consensus among authors; and specifying which parts of any given paper warranted retraction. Springer retraction notices appeared to improve over time with respect to the rubric's seven criteria. We observed some discrepancies among raters, indicating the difficulty in developing a robust objective rubric for evaluating retraction notices.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Accountability in research

DOI

EISSN

1545-5815

ISSN

0898-9621

Publication Date

August 2025

Volume

32

Issue

6

Start / End Page

1015 / 1026

Related Subject Headings

  • Scientific Misconduct
  • Retraction of Publication as Topic
  • Publishing
  • Pilot Projects
  • Periodicals as Topic
  • Humans
  • Applied Ethics
 

Citation

APA
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ICMJE
MLA
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Shi, A., Bier, B., Price, C., Schwartz, L., Wainright, D., Whithaus, A., … Angrist, M. (2025). Taking it back: A pilot study of a rubric measuring retraction notice quality. Accountability in Research, 32(6), 1015–1026. https://doi.org/10.1080/08989621.2024.2366281
Shi, Alyssa, Brooke Bier, Carrigan Price, Luke Schwartz, Devan Wainright, Audra Whithaus, Alison Abritis, Ivan Oransky, and Misha Angrist. “Taking it back: A pilot study of a rubric measuring retraction notice quality.Accountability in Research 32, no. 6 (August 2025): 1015–26. https://doi.org/10.1080/08989621.2024.2366281.
Shi A, Bier B, Price C, Schwartz L, Wainright D, Whithaus A, et al. Taking it back: A pilot study of a rubric measuring retraction notice quality. Accountability in research. 2025 Aug;32(6):1015–26.
Shi, Alyssa, et al. “Taking it back: A pilot study of a rubric measuring retraction notice quality.Accountability in Research, vol. 32, no. 6, Aug. 2025, pp. 1015–26. Epmc, doi:10.1080/08989621.2024.2366281.
Shi A, Bier B, Price C, Schwartz L, Wainright D, Whithaus A, Abritis A, Oransky I, Angrist M. Taking it back: A pilot study of a rubric measuring retraction notice quality. Accountability in research. 2025 Aug;32(6):1015–1026.

Published In

Accountability in research

DOI

EISSN

1545-5815

ISSN

0898-9621

Publication Date

August 2025

Volume

32

Issue

6

Start / End Page

1015 / 1026

Related Subject Headings

  • Scientific Misconduct
  • Retraction of Publication as Topic
  • Publishing
  • Pilot Projects
  • Periodicals as Topic
  • Humans
  • Applied Ethics