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How to Spot Fake Scientific Studies ?

(27.08.2025)


Spotting fake scientific studies is like exposing a well-executed magic trick — it takes attention, critical thinking, and a few proven methods. Here are the key clues that may help to identify fake science: 

1. Check the Author and Institution
  • Is the author using a private email address instead of an institutional one? That’s suspicious.
  • Are they affiliated with a recognized research institution, or do they lack credible academic ties?
  • Use platforms like Google Scholar, PubMed or ORCID to check their publication history and impact (e.g., h-index).
  • Evaluate if author's track record matches the paper's topic
  • If all authors are unknown and have no track record, that’s a red flag.

2. Evaluate the Journal
  • Was the study published in a reputable journal? Is the journal indexed in Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed or EVISA Journal database
  • Does it have a clear impact factor (via Journal Citation Reports, not just claims)?
  • Is the journal listed on Beall’s List or known for predatory publishing?
  • Has the journal been delisted from major databases due to ethical or quality issues?
  • Predatory papers are often published in journals with very broad or unrelated topics published in the same journal
  • Fraudulent journals lack peer-reviewing, showing up in fast acceptance and publication after submission (sometimes within days)  
  • Is the editorial board of the journal given ? Are well known scientists part of the board ?

3. Publisher legitimacy

4. Assess the Content
  • Abstract and Introduction
    • Do they clearly state a research question and background?
    • Fake papers often have vague, generic statements with no clear scientific purpose.
  • Methods
    • Are methods reproducible, specific, and detailed?
    • If the methodology is missing, too short, or nonsensical, that’s suspicious. 
  • Results and Figures 
    • Real results are presented clearly with statistical evidence. 
    • Fake/low-quality ones often have graphs that don’t match the claims, duplicated images, or data that seems “too perfect.” 
  • References 
    • Are citations relevant and from reputable sources? 
    • Check if citations actually support the claims.
    • Fake papers often cite other questionable papers, self-citations, or irrelevant references.
  • Originality
    • Has the same or similar material already been presented in another publication ?
    • Redundant papers are often created by paper mills with the aid of AI.
5. Look for Transparency
  • Are raw data or supplementary materials available?
  • Do the authors respond to post-publication questions? In one study, only 45% of suspicious authors replied, compared to 96% of legitimate ones.

6. Watch for Language Red Flags
  • Are there “tortured phrases”—awkward or overly complex wording that may indicate AI-generated text?
  • Is the writing style inconsistent or generic?


7. Tools That Can Help

8. Suggested Workflow
  1. Check journal → Indexed in Scopus/Web of Science/DOAJ ? Not on predatory list ?
  2. Verify paper → DOI exists in CrossRef/OpenAlex? Retraction Watch ?
  3. Scan Text → Use plagiarism + AI detection + tortured phrase spotting.
  4. Inspect figures → Run ORI/Proofig/ImageTwin checks
  5. Verify authors → ORCID + institutional presence
  6. Final judgment → If multiple red flags appear → suspicious

While fraudulent science papers are often generated with the help of AI, AI can also help to identify such papers, but it’s not foolproof. Right now, it’s best used as a supporting tool rather than a final authority. AI can flag anomalies, but expert judgment is still required to decide if the work is fraudulent, sloppy, or just unusual.

Within EVISA News we only discuss reputable studies. We also try our best to avoid the listing of suspicious journals within the EVISA Journal database. Yet, sometimes fraudulent papers are even published by well accepted journals (see for example here).  Such cases are often discussed by RetractionWatch. In case that a study highlighted within EVISA News gets retracted, we will report about it (see EVISA News revisited).



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