Parachute use to prevent death and major trauma when jumping from aircraft: randomized controlled trial
A follow-up BMJ satire that technically runs the trial by choosing very low-risk jumps.
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A follow-up BMJ satire that technically runs the trial by choosing very low-risk jumps.
A short BMJ measurement paper that asks a strangely specific anatomical question.
A conference acceptance test built by repeatedly tapping phone autocomplete.
A parody biomedical manuscript with film lore and broken citations still reached acceptance.
Randomly generated text plus cartoon bylines exposed fake peer-review theater.
A flawed fake paper was submitted widely to test open-access review quality.
A fabricated and unqualified scholar profile received editorial invitations.
From parody generator to real-world indexing failures and mass retractions.
A formal test of the cultural claim that Reviewer 2 is systematically harsher.
A crowdsourced wall of extreme and often hostile reviewer comments.
A BMJ Christmas study quantifying predatory invitation spam and unsubscribe outcomes.
A famously minimal paper whose near-empty content embodies its own diagnosis.
A satirical checklist of mentoring failures that graduate students recognize instantly.
A fabricated biomedical manuscript reportedly accepted by multiple low-quality journals.
A deliberately absurd pandemic-era submission accepted then quickly retracted.
A GPT-4 era stress test of suspected predatory journals using generated manuscripts.
A demonstration of how weak study design and hype channels can manufacture credibility.
A BMJ-era joke case that continued to echo in later scientific references.