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When Peer Review Fails: The Challenges of Detecting Fraudulent Science and Its Aftermath

By Roger Watson Modified: Mar 31, 2026 06:01 GMT

A growing number of high-profile corrections and mass retractions has put peer review squarely in the spotlight: when the gatekeeping system fails, the consequences extend beyond a single retraction to public trust in science, policy, and researcher careers. A review of retraction causes found that fake or manipulated peer review became a major reason for withdrawal of articles since the 2010s, and recent publisher investigations continue to uncover large-scale manipulation in special issues and submission streams.

What peer review is and why it matters

Scholarly peer review is the process by which manuscripts are evaluated by experts before publication to assess validity, originality, and fit for a journal. It serves as a quality-control filter and a community endorsement mechanism that supports reproducibility, guides editorial decisions, and signals credibility to readers. Peer review is not infallible: it relies on volunteer expertise, editorial oversight, and systems that can be exploited.

Traditional pre-publication peer review remains central, but the landscape now includes stronger preprint discussion, automated screening tools, cross-publisher intelligence and more active post-publication scrutiny. These layers aim to distribute responsibility across the research lifecycle rather than concentrating it solely at editorial triage.

When and how peer review fails

What happens when peer review fails: immediate and downstream consequences

Real-world examples that illustrate differing failure mechanisms

How failures are detected and how the record is corrected

Detection occurs through multiple channels: editorial audits, cross-publisher screening tools, whistleblowers, post-publication peer review platforms (e.g., PubPeer), and independent sleuthing by researchers. Once concerns are credible, journals follow COPE flowcharts and retraction guidelines to issue expressions of concern, corrections, or retractions, and to notify indexing services so the scholarly record reflects the change. Recent industry collaborations and tools seek to catch problems earlier.

What is changing: publisher and system-level responses

Publishers and industry consortia are building shared defenses. The STM Integrity Hub and related screening tools are designed to spot indicators of paper-mill output, duplicate submissions, or reused reviewers across multiple journals and platforms creating an early-warning system that can block suspicious manuscripts before peer review progresses. These ecosystem-level responses complement COPE policies and editorial best practice.

Practical guidance: what researchers, reviewers and editors can do now

Researchers

Peer reviewers and editors

A short checklist for immediate action (for researchers and journal offices)

Points to note and common mistakes

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    Conclusion: restoring trust through layered defenses and good practice

    Peer review continues to be a vital mechanism for quality assurance, but it is not a panacea. When peer review fails, the remedies expressions of concern, corrections, and retractions restore the literature but cannot always undo the lost time, diverted resources, or reputational harm. Researchers should therefore adopt transparent reporting, careful selection of collaborators and services, and proactive data sharing. Editors and publishers should verify reviewer identities, use screening tools and industry collaboration, and follow COPE guidance for clear, timely corrections. Together these steps make peer review more resilient and protect the credibility of scholarly communication.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Fake peer review occurs when authors or third parties supply fabricated reviewer identities or hijack editorial workflows so bogus favorable reviews reach editors. This manipulation has been linked to mass retractions involving dozens or hundreds of papers, particularly in special issues.

    The journal may issue an expression of concern during investigation, then retract the paper if evidence shows unreliable findings or compromised review. Authors face reputational damage, potential career consequences, and institutions may revoke degrees or terminate employment for serious misconduct.

    No, peer review is designed to evaluate plausibility, methodology, and interpretation not to detect deliberate fabrication of raw data or covert manipulation. Detection usually requires replication attempts, whistleblowing, post-publication scrutiny, or formal investigations rather than standard peer review.

    Detection occurs through editorial audits, cross-publisher screening tools, whistleblowers, post-publication peer review platforms like PubPeer, and independent researcher investigation. Publishers then follow COPE guidelines to issue corrections, expressions of concern, or retractions and notify indexing services.

    Paper mills are organized entities producing manuscripts or data that mimic legitimate research. They bypass peer review by exploiting cursory editorial checks, manipulating reviewer selection, and creating convincing but fraudulent content that passes initial screening if reviewer scrutiny is insufficient.

    Use transparent reporting with data and code sharing, avoid third-party submission services of uncertain provenance, document any outsourced assistance, suggest only independent reviewers without conflicts, and maintain institutional email verification for all communications with journals.

    SC
    Roger Watson

    Dr. Chen has 15 years of experience in academic publishing, specializing in helping early-career researchers navigate the publishing process .

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