DocDez t1_j0jj4td wrote
Reply to comment by Jiggly1984 in Researchers investigated the citation frequency of retracted scientific papers in science. They found that the retraction of papers only has a limited effect on citation (decreases citation frequency by ~60%) compared to non-retracted papers. Thus, retracted papers often live on. by Alysdexic
This would be a comparatively easier task too.
Jiggly1984 t1_j0jkuh3 wrote
I would think so too... Mainly looking to compare the documents for changes and looking for key words like correction or retraction.
DocDez t1_j0jmbd2 wrote
Even easier than that, errata are formally published documents by a journal saying “actually, we messed up, please ignore that last thing we said”. It attaches to the underlying work forever. It’s closer to an appeals court reversing a trial courts decision: pretty hard to miss and very clearly marked every time.
Edit: first redditor to tell Zotero gets the big bucks.
Hypernova1912 t1_j0jo1qb wrote
They've apparently already implemented it, though as of the linked post only for papers with a DOI or PMID entered. Not sure if they expanded it in Zotero 6.
Sinapine t1_j0jsoc6 wrote
Hopefully endnote will get something similar. I'll always use whatever my employer gets a group license for and it seems that most places use endnote.
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