Thursday, July 16, 2026

Substantive Uniformitarianism as a Testable Theory

One of Gould’s most important moves is to take an old geological slogan and return it to the status of a hypothesis. That may sound like a demotion, but in science it is also a form of respect. A hypothesis can be tested. It can be refined. It can be contradicted. It can do work, fail in part, survive in part, and teach the field what its own evidence will no longer permit. Gould calls substantive uniformitarianism a “testable theory of geologic change.” That phrase is the doorway into the whole problem.

Substantive uniformitarianism is the claim that Earth history has unfolded through a rough uniformity of rates or material conditions. In its Lyellian form, it emphasized “cumulative slow change” caused by natural processes operating at “relatively constant rates.” Gould is careful to distinguish this from methodological uniformitarianism, which is about invariant natural law. Substantive uniformitarianism is not a rule of scientific reasoning. It is a description of how the world supposedly behaved.

That difference is decisive. If substantive uniformitarianism is a theory about the tempo of Earth history, then it must answer to the Earth. It cannot hide behind the prestige of scientific method. It cannot claim immunity because it once helped geology escape supernatural explanation. It must be judged by strata, fossils, structures, rates, extinctions, origins, and the uneven archive of deep time.

Gould’s verdict is blunt: substantive uniformitarianism is “false.” But the meaning of “false” here requires care. Gould is not saying that ordinary processes are unimportant. He is not denying erosion, sedimentation, volcanism, glaciation, subsidence, uplift, or biological change. He is not trying to replace Lyell’s science with an appetite for spectacle. He is saying that strict uniformity of rate and condition has not “withstood the test of new data.” The problem is not the existence of slow change. The problem is the conversion of slow change into a universal expectation.

This is why the word “testable” matters. A testable theory may be valuable even when it eventually fails as a general doctrine. Lyell’s substantive uniformitarianism trained geologists to search for causes visible in the present. It asked whether small causes, given sufficient time, could explain immense results. That was a profound imaginative discipline. It prevented geologists from solving every difficulty by invoking a vast convulsion. It made patience scientific.

But patience can become a prejudice. If the field begins with the assumption that rates have remained essentially uniform, then evidence for pulses, crises, gaps, accelerations, and rare events may be treated as an embarrassment rather than a clue. Gould worries precisely about this. He says substantive uniformitarianism, held too rigidly, becomes “stifling to the formulation of new hypotheses.” A testable theory has slipped into a prior commitment. It no longer waits for the rocks to speak. It tells them which accent is acceptable.

The fossil record is one of Gould’s key pressure points. He writes that the history of life is “by no means uniform,” as seen in frequencies of extinction and origination plotted against time. Life does not appear as a smooth procession of steady replacement. It clusters, thins, expands, collapses, radiates, and suffers. Origination and extinction are not evenly metronomic. They produce patterns that make strict rate-uniformity implausible.

The same logic applies beyond paleontology. Sedimentary records can preserve long quiet intervals and sudden depositional events. Tectonic histories can include relatively stable configurations followed by reorganizations. Climate records can show gradual trends interrupted by rapid transitions. Volcanic activity can pulse. Erosion can be slow for long periods and intense under unusual hydrological or climatic conditions. A lawful Earth can still have an irregular pulse.

This is where Gould’s distinction protects science from a false dilemma. If one rejects substantive uniformitarianism, one is not rejecting natural explanation. One is rejecting a specific claim about uniform rates or conditions. Methodological uniformitarianism remains intact. The same laws can operate through very different circumstances. Gravity does not change because a landslide is sudden. Thermodynamics does not vanish because climate shifts abruptly. Biological principles do not fail because extinction rates spike. Lawful processes need not produce evenly paced history.

A modern reader can see Gould’s argument as an early doorway into a richer view of Earth systems. Complex systems often behave unevenly. Thresholds can be crossed. Feedbacks can amplify change. Stress can accumulate before release. Biological systems can absorb disturbance until they cannot. Sediment can build grain by grain, then move in a storm. A quiet slope can hold for centuries, then collapse in minutes. None of this requires abandoning law. It requires abandoning the expectation that lawfulness wears a calm face.

The limitation worth considering is whether Gould’s rejection of substantive uniformitarianism risks flattening its more moderate forms. Few modern geologists would defend strict constant rates. Many would instead affirm that known processes, including ordinary ones, remain central to explanation unless evidence demands otherwise. That more flexible view is not the rigid doctrine Gould criticizes. It is closer to a research preference: begin with processes we understand, but do not force every past event into the mold of present averages.

Yet Gould anticipates that distinction. His quarrel is not with using known causes. It is with treating rate-uniformity as a governing doctrine. He wants hypotheses judged “on their own merit,” not by whether they conform to “a preconceived idea of nature’s course.” That line captures the scientific ethic behind the article. A theory earns its authority from evidence, and loses authority when evidence no longer supports it.

This post should therefore leave readers with a more generous understanding of scientific failure. Substantive uniformitarianism was not useless because it was false in strict form. It was historically productive. It disciplined geology, expanded time, and elevated natural process. But once the evidence demanded a more varied Earth history, the theory had to shrink from doctrine back into context.

In that sense, Gould does not merely reject a concept. He restores the dignity of testability. Theories are not sacred because they helped us once. They remain scientific because they remain answerable. Substantive uniformitarianism helped geologists learn how to read the planet. Then the planet, with its uneven record of life, climate, rock, rupture, and recovery, read back.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The Tiny Theses That Cast Enormous Shadows

A doctoral thesis is often imagined as an academic cathedral: hundreds of pages, footnotes stacked like masonry, several years of work sealed inside a hardbound volume heavy enough to discourage casual reading.

Yet some of the most influential doctoral theses in history were surprisingly compact. John Nash transformed economics in 27 pages. Albert Einstein earned his doctorate with a study of molecular dimensions occupying roughly two dozen pages. Ludwig Wittgenstein submitted a slim philosophical book that had already been published. In biology, James Watson completed a thesis of about 92 pages on bacteriophages.

These works offer a refreshing lesson: a thesis is not valuable because of how much paper it occupies. Its real measure is whether it asks an important question, makes an original contribution, and supports its conclusions with sufficient evidence.

What counts as a “short” thesis?

Page counts must be treated carefully. Historical theses survive as handwritten manuscripts, typescripts, journal reprints, library scans and later book editions. One version may include a title page, curriculum vitae and examination records, while another contains only the scientific text.

Different disciplines also require different kinds of evidence. A mathematical proof may be complete in 20 pages. A modern experimental biology thesis may need extensive descriptions of samples, controls, ethics, statistical analyses, protocols and supplementary data. A humanities thesis may devote hundreds of pages to contextual interpretation.

“Short,” therefore, does not mean the same thing everywhere. The examples below range from genuinely miniature dissertations to works that were merely concise by the standards of their fields.

ScholarFieldThesisApproximate extent
John NashMathematics and economicsNon-Cooperative Games27 pages
Albert EinsteinPhysicsA New Determination of Molecular DimensionsRoughly 24 pages
James D. WatsonBiologyThe Biological Properties of X-Ray Inactivated BacteriophageAbout 92 pages
Marie CuriePhysics and chemistryResearch on Radioactive Substances144 pages in a surviving scan
Ludwig WittgensteinPhilosophyTractatus Logico-PhilosophicusEdition-dependent, but a slim book
Kenneth ArrowEconomicsSocial Choice and Individual ValuesCompact monograph-length work
Louis de BrogliePhysicsResearches on the Theory of QuantaA relatively concise dissertation

John Nash: 27 pages that changed economics

Perhaps the clearest example of an extraordinarily short and influential PhD thesis is John Forbes Nash Jr.’s Non-Cooperative Games.

Nash received his PhD in mathematics from Princeton University in 1950. Princeton describes his dissertation as only 27 pages long. He completed his doctoral work in two years and received the degree shortly before his twenty-second birthday.

The thesis addressed situations in which several decision-makers act independently, each attempting to improve their own outcome. Nash introduced a general way of describing a stable configuration in such a game. At this point, no player can improve their result by changing strategy alone while the others retain theirs.

This configuration became known as the Nash equilibrium.

The idea eventually escaped the borders of mathematics. It became central to economics and was applied to bargaining, auctions, competition between firms, international relations, evolutionary biology, voting, public policy and many other settings. Nash shared the 1994 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his analysis of equilibria in non-cooperative games.

The remarkable feature of Nash’s thesis is not simply its brevity. It is its intellectual compression. The thesis defines a problem, develops the mathematical framework, establishes the existence of equilibrium under broad conditions and explains why the concept matters.

There is very little academic furniture. Almost everything in the room is load-bearing.

Albert Einstein: a doctorate without relativity

Einstein’s doctoral thesis is often surrounded by a cloud of misunderstanding. It was not his thesis on special relativity. Nor was it principally about the photoelectric effect or the famous relation between mass and energy.

Its title was Eine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen, or A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions. Einstein submitted it to the University of Zurich in 1905, and the doctorate was formally conferred in 1906. The University of Zurich describes it as one of Einstein’s most frequently cited research papers.

The original dissertation is commonly counted as roughly 24 pages, depending on whether preliminary material is included. Rather than rewriting the foundations of space and time, Einstein used properties of solutions, particularly viscosity and diffusion, to estimate molecular dimensions and Avogadro’s number.

This was a practical and testable problem. Molecules could not yet be directly observed, and some prominent scientists remained cautious about whether atoms and molecules represented physical objects or merely convenient theoretical devices. Einstein showed how measurable macroscopic behaviour could reveal microscopic dimensions.

His thesis illustrates a powerful form of scientific economy. A narrow question can become profound when it connects quantities that can be measured with entities that cannot yet be seen.

Einstein’s dissertation also offers a useful antidote to academic grandiosity. A thesis does not need to announce a complete theory of the universe. It can earn its place by solving one carefully chosen problem unusually well.

Louis de Broglie: matter begins to behave like a wave

Another compact physics dissertation altered the foundations of twentieth-century science.

In 1924, Louis de Broglie submitted Recherches sur la théorie des quanta, or Researches on the Theory of Quanta, to the Faculty of Sciences at the University of Paris. The thesis proposed that material particles, including electrons, should be associated with waves.

At the time, physicists had already learned that light could exhibit both wave-like and particle-like properties. De Broglie asked a beautifully symmetrical question: if waves such as light can behave like particles, might particles such as electrons also behave like waves?

The answer became the idea of matter waves. Electron diffraction experiments later supported it, and the concept became foundational to wave mechanics and quantum theory. De Broglie received the 1929 Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering the wave nature of electrons.

De Broglie’s thesis demonstrates a different kind of brevity. Its power came from a bold conceptual reversal. Instead of accumulating an enormous catalogue of observations, it extended an existing symmetry to territory where few had thought to apply it.

A small intellectual hinge swung open an enormous door.

James Watson: a short biology thesis before the double helix

Biological theses are rarely as short as mathematical ones because experiments bring logistical luggage. Organisms must be cultivated, samples prepared, treatments administered, controls established and observations recorded.

Nevertheless, James D. Watson’s 1950 doctoral dissertation at Indiana University was only about 92 pages. Its title was The Biological Properties of X-Ray Inactivated Bacteriophage. Indiana University preserves a digitized copy in its collections.

A bacteriophage is a virus that infects bacteria. Watson investigated how exposure to X-rays affected the biological activity of these viruses. The thesis belonged to the growing research programme using bacteriophages as relatively simple systems for studying heredity, mutation and biological reproduction.

This work preceded Watson’s involvement in determining the structure of DNA. It was not a hidden preview of the double helix. Instead, it shows him developing within the experimental culture of phage genetics that helped prepare the ground for molecular biology. Watson defended the dissertation in May 1950.

At 92 pages, the thesis is not a pamphlet. Yet it remains strikingly compact when compared with many present-day experimental dissertations containing several published papers, long methodological appendices and extensive supplementary datasets.

Its brevity was possible partly because the research question was sharply bounded. It did not attempt to explain all viral biology. It asked what happened to particular biological properties after a specific physical treatment.

Marie Curie: concise evidence for a new world of matter

Marie Curie’s doctoral thesis was longer than Nash’s or Einstein’s, but it was still a remarkably concentrated document given the scale of the discoveries it assembled.

Curie defended her thesis on radioactive substances at the Sorbonne on 25 June 1903. Her work brought together painstaking measurements of radioactivity and investigations that led to the identification of polonium and radium. A surviving digitized version runs to approximately 144 pages, while later published editions may have different pagination.

Curie’s research helped establish that radioactivity was associated with the atom itself rather than being a conventional chemical reaction caused by molecular arrangements. Her doctoral work stood at the crossroads of physics and chemistry, examining both the measurable emissions from matter and the isolation of previously unknown elements.

She shared the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics with Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel, and later received the 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Curie’s thesis reveals why page count should not be confused with effort. Behind a concise finished text may lie years of physically exhausting experimentation, repeated chemical separations, instrument building and measurements conducted under difficult conditions.

The document was compact. The labour compressed inside it was immense.

Ludwig Wittgenstein: when a philosophical book became a thesis

The humanities provide one of the strangest examples.

Ludwig Wittgenstein completed the work that became Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus during and shortly after the First World War. It was published in German in 1921 and in a bilingual edition in 1922.

When Wittgenstein returned to Cambridge in 1929, he submitted the already published Tractatus as his doctoral dissertation. Trinity College records that he received the PhD in June of that year.

The Tractatus is a slim and highly compressed work organized as a hierarchy of numbered propositions. It examines the relationship among language, logic, facts and the world. Its central ambition is to clarify what can meaningfully be expressed and where language reaches its limits.

Its exact page count depends heavily on the edition, translation, typography and inclusion of parallel German and English texts. It is therefore more accurate to call it a compact book than to assign it a universal thesis length.

Wittgenstein’s case was also highly unusual. This was not a normal student dissertation gradually revised through conventional doctoral supervision. It was an already famous philosophical work submitted by a thinker whose reputation had preceded his formal degree.

Still, it demonstrates that philosophical significance need not be proportional to textual acreage. The Tractatus is short because it is aphoristic, architectonic and exceptionally dense. A few lines can occupy commentators for entire careers.

That does not necessarily make it an ideal model for ordinary thesis writing. Compression can generate power, but it can also generate obscurity. Wittgenstein’s brevity produced both illumination and a century of argument about what exactly he meant.

Kenneth Arrow: a compact thesis and the limits of collective choice

Kenneth Arrow’s doctoral research produced another small work with a gigantic intellectual afterlife.

Arrow’s dissertation, Social Choice and Individual Values, was completed at Columbia University and published in 1951. The work grew from research he conducted at RAND and laid the foundation for modern social choice theory.

Arrow asked whether individual preferences could be combined into a coherent collective decision while satisfying several apparently reasonable principles. His result, now known as Arrow’s impossibility theorem, showed that no voting rule can satisfy all of the desired conditions in every possible situation involving multiple alternatives.

The theorem did not say that democracy is pointless or that all voting systems are equally bad. It showed that collective choice contains unavoidable trade-offs. A system may protect one desirable principle only by weakening another.

Arrow’s dissertation later became a compact monograph rather than a sprawling encyclopaedia. Its exact pagination depends on whether one counts the original dissertation, RAND report or published edition, so it is safer to describe it as concise rather than attach a single number to it.

The work influenced economics, political science, philosophy, computer science and the mathematical study of voting. Arrow received the 1972 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for broader contributions to economic equilibrium and welfare theory, with his social-choice work remaining one of his defining achievements.

Like Nash, Arrow showed how a precisely formulated mathematical question could expose the hidden structure of everyday social institutions.

A famous case that was not a PhD thesis

Lists of short doctoral dissertations frequently include Claude Shannon’s A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits. That work showed how Boolean algebra could be used to analyse and design electrical switching circuits, helping create the conceptual foundations of digital computing.

It was unquestionably influential. It was also a master’s thesis, not a PhD thesis. MIT records the work in its repository, and MIT publications consistently identify it as Shannon’s master’s thesis.

This correction matters because stories about tiny famous theses often grow through repetition. Einstein’s dissertation becomes “his thesis on relativity.” Shannon’s master’s thesis becomes a doctorate. Page counts are copied without checking whether they include references or front matter.

The mythology of short theses can become longer than the theses themselves.

What these theses have in common

Their subjects differ dramatically, but several patterns recur.

1. Each thesis has a sharply defined centre

Nash studied equilibrium in non-cooperative games. Einstein estimated molecular dimensions. Watson examined X-ray-inactivated bacteriophages. Arrow studied how individual preferences become collective decisions.

None tried to “solve mathematics,” “explain physics” or “reconstruct society.” Their ambition was channelled through a narrow question.

A good thesis often begins by making the problem smaller and the thinking deeper.

2. Their originality can be stated clearly

The core contribution of each work can be expressed in a few sentences. This does not mean the work was simple. It means the author knew where the intellectual pulse was located.

A thesis becomes bloated when its central contribution is buried beneath everything the researcher learned along the way. Scholarship requires context, but context should orbit the result rather than eclipse it.

3. They contain enough evidence for their claims

Brevity is valuable only when nothing essential has been removed.

Nash still needed definitions and proofs. Einstein needed derivations tied to measurable quantities. Watson needed experimental observations. Curie needed systematic measurements and chemical evidence.

A thesis should not be short because methods, controls, limitations or contradictory results have been hidden in a drawer.

4. They often opened questions rather than closing fields

Nash equilibrium did not finish game theory. De Broglie did not complete quantum mechanics. Arrow did not design the perfect voting system. Their theses created intellectual machinery that others could use, challenge and extend.

A strong dissertation does not need to contain the final word. It needs to add a reliable new sentence to the conversation.

Should today’s PhD students try to write a 27-page thesis?

Usually not.

Modern universities often have formal requirements concerning introductions, literature reviews, methods, ethics, authorship, data availability, limitations and references. Experimental and computational projects may generate several interconnected studies. Interdisciplinary work may require enough explanation for readers from more than one field.

A student should therefore not use Nash’s 27 pages as a machete and begin hacking away at necessary detail.

The better lesson is not “write fewer pages.” It is:

Make every page know why it is there.

A concise thesis may still be 150 pages. A long thesis may still be elegant if every chapter supports the central argument. Conversely, a 40-page thesis can feel endless when its question is vague and its reasoning repetitive.

The true enemy is not length. It is intellectual fog.

The real unit of a thesis is not the page

Famous short theses are alluring because they appear to promise escape from academic bulk. But their deeper message is more demanding.

Writing briefly requires confidence about the question, command of the evidence and discipline about what belongs. It is often easier to add another chapter than to decide which single argument the thesis must defend.

Nash needed 27 pages to alter economics. Einstein needed roughly two dozen to make molecules measurable. Wittgenstein turned a slim sequence of propositions into one of philosophy’s most debated books. Curie placed evidence for a new atomic reality into a comparatively compact volume.

Their theses were small containers carrying unusually dense cargo.

The goal of doctoral research is not to produce the longest object that a shelf can endure. It is to make an original contribution that remains standing after the scaffolding is removed. 📚✨


Society Journals vs Non-Society Journals: What Retraction Patterns Reveal

A society journal is often imagined as the scholarly village well: owned or guided by a learned community, watched by editors who know the field, shaped by disciplinary norms rather than purely commercial machinery. A non-society journal, especially one inside a large publisher pipeline, is often imagined differently: faster, broader, more industrial, sometimes more vulnerable to paper mills and special-issue storms.

But does the Retraction Watch database actually support that neat story?

Not quite. The truth is more interesting, with a few trapdoors, some statistical smoke, and one very large IEEE-shaped elephant in the room. 🧪📉

I analyzed the uploaded Retraction Watch CSV, using 70,589 records with usable original-publication and retraction-notice dates. I classified journals using a high-confidence society-linked publisher rule: publishers such as IEEE, ACS, RSC, ASBMB, ASM, AAAS, NAS, BMJ, Massachusetts Medical Society, American Heart Association, American Medical Association, IOP, AIP, Royal Society Publishing, and similar society or professional-association publishers were marked as society-linked.

Important caveat: this is conservative. If a society-owned journal is published by Wiley, Springer, Elsevier, OUP, or another commercial/university publisher and the society name is not visible in the Retraction Watch publisher field, it is counted here as non-society/unclassified. So the comparison is best read as:

High-confidence society-linked publishers vs everything else in the database.

Also, these are retraction-record counts, not retraction rates. We do not have the total number of papers published by each journal class, country, or subject.


The headline finding

The answer depends on what kind of retraction we are counting.

If we include conference records, society-linked publications appear much faster to retract because IEEE conference proceedings create a huge fast-retraction block. But if we focus on journal-like records by excluding conference abstracts/papers, the pattern flips:

Society-linked journal records have a longer median time to retraction than non-society/unclassified records.

Median time to retraction by journal class

Society-linked records look very fast only when conference records are included. Excluding conference records, society-linked journals have longer median lags.

0years0.8years1.6years2.4years3.2yearsSociety-linked |...Society-linked |...Society-linked |...Non-society / unc...Non-society / unc...Non-society / unc...

Calculated from the uploaded Retraction Watch CSV.

The key numbers:

ComparisonSociety-linkedNon-society / unclassified
All records17,670 records, median 0.17 years52,919 records, median 1.59 years
Excluding conference records5,866 records, median 2.81 years50,661 records, median 1.66 years
Research articles only5,251 records, median 2.86 years42,612 records, median 1.67 years

That is the first big lesson: conference proceedings distort the society-journal comparison. Once conference records are removed, society-linked retractions are less frequent in absolute number but often older, slower, and more forensic.


Are fraud-related retractions more common in non-society journals?

This question needs two answers, because “fraud” can mean different things.

I used two reason categories:

Narrow fraud/misconduct: reasons containing terms such as fabrication, falsification, manipulation, misconduct, false/forged authorship, hoax, or criminal proceedings.

Expanded integrity abuse: narrow fraud/misconduct plus paper mill, compromised peer review, rogue editor, peer-review concerns, and computer-generated or computer-aided content.

Here is the pattern for non-conference records.

Reason profiles differ sharply between society and non-society records

Percent of non-conference records tagged with each broad reason theme. Categories overlap because one record can have multiple reasons.

Society-linked
Non-society / unclassified
0%20%40%60%80%Fraud / misconduc...Paper mill / peer...Data / results /...Image concernsPlagiarism / dupl...Ethics / authorsh...Journal / publish...

Calculated from the uploaded Retraction Watch CSV.

So the answer is a deliciously inconvenient yes and no.

If by fraud we mean classic lab or author misconduct, society-linked records show a higher share:

23.6% of society-linked non-conference records vs 7.0% of non-society/unclassified records.

This is strongly connected to older biomedical and life-science cases where reasons include misconduct, image manipulation, missing original data, or institutional investigations.

But if by fraud we mean industrialized publication fraud, such as paper mills, compromised peer review, rogue editorial behavior, and computer-generated content, the non-society/unclassified group is much higher:

44.5% of non-society/unclassified records vs 9.6% of society-linked records.

So the better conclusion is:

Society-linked retraction records are more enriched for old-style forensic misconduct and image/data problems. Non-society/unclassified retraction records are more enriched for industrial-scale paper-mill and peer-review-abuse problems.

Two different species of rot, two different smells.


Over time: the pace is not similar

Society-linked and non-society/unclassified retractions do not move in parallel. Their waves come from different machines.

When conference records are included, society-linked records explode in 2010 and 2011 because of IEEE conference-proceedings retractions. But for a fairer journal comparison, the plot below excludes conference abstracts and conference papers.

Retractions over time after excluding conference records

Non-society/unclassified records show a large 2023 spike, while society-linked journal records remain much smaller and more stable.

03.5K7K10.5K14K20002002200420062008201020122014201620182020202220242026

Calculated from the uploaded Retraction Watch CSV. The year 2026 is partial.

The non-society/unclassified spike in 2023 is enormous. In the data, it is heavily associated with large publisher and journal clusters, especially Hindawi-linked retractions and paper-mill or compromised-review themes.

Society-linked records, after excluding conferences, do not show the same 2023 eruption. They look more like a steady stream of older, field-specific retractions.

So the pace is not similar. The non-society/unclassified group has industrial spikes. Society-linked journals have slower forensic pulses.


Subject patterns: society-linked retractions are concentrated differently

Among non-conference records, society-linked retractions are most visible in biology/life sciences and physical sciences/engineering. But their share is modest in every broad subject group, because most retraction records in the database are classified as non-society/unclassified under the conservative publisher-only rule.

Society-linked share of retracted records by subject

Non-conference records only. Percent shows the share of retraction records in each broad subject group linked to high-confidence society publishers.

0%4%8%12%16%Biology / life sc...Physical sciences...Health sciences /...Environmental sci...Social sciencesBusiness / techno...Humanities

Calculated from the uploaded Retraction Watch CSV. Subject categories overlap because records can have multiple subjects.

The median lag by subject also differs:

Subject groupSociety-linked medianNon-society / unclassified median
Biology / life sciences3.56 years2.29 years
Physical sciences / engineering2.00 years1.55 years
Health sciences / medicine2.75 years1.63 years
Social sciences3.27 years1.39 years
Business / technology / computing2.74 years1.48 years

The society-linked side is consistently slower in the journal-like subset. That likely reflects the composition of society-linked retractions: older biomedical, biochemical, cell-biology, cancer, microbiology, chemistry, and physics journals where image manipulation, original-data availability, and institutional investigations are common.

The non-society/unclassified side has many recent paper-mill and compromised-peer-review batches, which can be corrected faster once a publisher-wide investigation starts.


Country patterns: society-linked retractions are not evenly distributed

Country attribution is tricky because one paper can list multiple countries. I counted a multi-country paper once for each listed country. Again, this is not a national retraction rate.

The plot below shows the share of non-conference retraction records that came from society-linked publishers among countries with large record counts.

Society-linked share by country

Non-conference records only. Countries with at least 500 country-paper occurrences are shown.

0%8%16%24%32%United StatesJapanSouth KoreaItalyFranceCanadaSpainUnited KingdomGermanyAustraliaRussiaIndiaChinaTurkeyIranPakistanEgyptSaudi ArabiaMalaysiaEthiopia

Calculated from the uploaded Retraction Watch CSV. Multi-country papers are counted once for each listed country.

The pattern is striking:

Country patternInterpretation
United States, Japan, South Korea, Italy, France, Canada, SpainHigher society-linked share among retracted records
China, India, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, EthiopiaMuch lower society-linked share among retracted records
Japan and FranceLong lags in both society and non-society groups
China and IndiaNon-society/unclassified records are much more numerous and generally faster

This probably reflects where different countries’ retracted records sit in the publication ecosystem. China and India have large concentrations in non-society journals affected by publisher-wide investigations, paper mills, compromised peer review, and special-issue cleanup. The United States and Japan have more society-linked biomedical, biochemical, medical, and life-science records, many with long-lag forensic issues.

Again, this is not a statement about national scientific quality. It is a map of where retracted papers from those countries appear in the database.


Society-linked journal clusters: slower, older, more forensic

The largest society-linked journal clusters are not dominated by paper-mill megabatches. They are dominated by biochemical, cancer, chemistry, crystallography, society proceedings, and elite general-science journals.

Society-linked journal clusterRecordsMedian lag
The Journal of Biological Chemistry4367.32 years
Bioscience Reports3023.13 years
RSC Advances2472.56 years
PNAS1763.30 years
Science1571.98 years
Journal of Testing and Evaluation1482.74 years
Acta Crystallographica Section E1412.97 years
Cancer Research1149.22 years
Journal of Cell Science726.03 years
Journal of Clinical Investigation713.87 years

This table explains why society-linked non-conference records have a longer median lag. Some of these journals are old, central journals in fields where image-data scrutiny, institutional investigations, and raw-data questions can emerge years later.

The long-lag society-linked pattern is especially visible in journals such as Journal of Biological Chemistry, Cancer Research, Diabetes, Circulation Research, and Journal of Cell Science. These are not usually fast paper-mill cleanup stories. They are often slow forensic stories.


Non-society/unclassified journal clusters: larger, faster, more industrial

The largest non-society/unclassified journal clusters are different beasts.

Non-society / unclassified journal clusterRecordsMedian lag
Journal of Intelligent & Fuzzy Systems1,5651.77 years
PLoS One1,4854.31 years
Journal of Healthcare Engineering1,0741.61 years
Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine1,0661.26 years
Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience1,0281.25 years
Security and Communication Networks9491.38 years
Arabian Journal of Geosciences7790.30 years
Wireless Communications and Mobile Computing7621.16 years
Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine7531.22 years
BioMed Research International6851.42 years
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews5748.32 years
Soft Computing5662.67 years

Here the signature is bigger and more batch-like. Hindawi journals dominate several clusters, with median lags around one to two years. IOS Press, Springer, Wiley, SAGE, PLoS, and others appear strongly too.

The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews is an exception: many records there have long lags because review updates, withdrawals, and review-literature corrections follow a different lifecycle.

So non-society/unclassified is not one category. It contains at least two worlds:

  1. Fast industrial correction: paper mills, peer-review problems, special issues, publisher audits.
  2. Slow review or biomedical correction: PLoS One, Cochrane, Spandidos, OUP, some clinical journals.

Country-journal clusters: where the map becomes visible

The largest society-linked country-journal clusters:

Country-journal cluster, society-linkedRecordsMedian lag
China, Bioscience Reports2973.14 years
United States, Journal of Biological Chemistry2516.85 years
China, RSC Advances1562.20 years
United States, PNAS1383.87 years
China, Acta Crystallographica Section E1382.97 years
China, Journal of Testing and Evaluation1192.74 years
United States, Science1012.17 years
United States, Cancer Research9110.78 years
United States, Journal of Clinical Investigation613.67 years

The largest non-society/unclassified country-journal clusters:

Country-journal cluster, non-society/unclassifiedRecordsMedian lag
China, Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine9971.24 years
China, Journal of Healthcare Engineering9821.62 years
China, Journal of Intelligent & Fuzzy Systems9741.90 years
China, Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience8881.22 years
China, Security and Communication Networks8571.36 years
China, Arabian Journal of Geosciences7670.30 years
China, Wireless Communications and Mobile Computing7401.17 years
China, BioMed Research International7321.67 years
China, Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine7051.17 years
India, Journal of Intelligent & Fuzzy Systems4291.56 years
United Kingdom, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews3218.90 years
United States, PLoS One2857.04 years

This table captures the whole story in miniature.

Society-linked clusters: fewer records, longer lags, often biochemical, biomedical, chemistry, or elite multidisciplinary journals.

Non-society/unclassified clusters: larger record counts, many fast-lag computational, medical-engineering, special-issue, and publisher-audit clusters, plus a few long-lag exceptions such as Cochrane and PLoS One.


What about publisher differences?

For non-conference records, the largest society-linked publishers are:

Society-linked publisherRecordsMedian lag
Royal Society of Chemistry5392.40 years
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology4527.09 years
American Chemical Society4181.68 years
Portland Press3313.25 years
American Association for Cancer Research2338.67 years
American Society for Microbiology2114.28 years
AAAS1871.97 years
IOP Publishing1771.56 years
National Academy of Sciences1763.30 years
IEEE1640.30 years
BMJ Publishing1531.83 years
American Heart Association1506.34 years

The largest non-society/unclassified publishers are:

Non-society / unclassified publisherRecordsMedian lag
Hindawi11,5241.31 years
Elsevier6,9511.70 years
Springer5,1521.46 years
Wiley4,1452.56 years
Springer Nature Publishing Group2,8491.97 years
Taylor and Francis1,8552.15 years
IOS Press1,7431.73 years
SAGE Publications1,7222.00 years
PLoS1,6104.38 years
Spandidos1,0045.68 years
Oxford University Press9594.71 years

This is not a clean “society good, non-society bad” picture. It is more like:

Society-linked journals have fewer but older and more forensic retraction records.
Non-society/unclassified journals have many more records, including very large recent batch events.


The most important hidden variable: article type

Conference records radically change the story. IEEE alone creates a large society-linked block in the full dataset, and many of those records are fast. That is why all society-linked records have a median lag of 0.17 years, but society-linked non-conference records have a median of 2.81 years.

So any society vs non-society comparison must specify:

  • Are conference proceedings included?
  • Are only research articles included?
  • Are expressions of concern included?
  • Are corrections and reinstatements included?
  • Are paper-mill mass retractions included?
  • Are publisher-hosted society journals identifiable?

Without these distinctions, the analysis becomes statistical soup with a DOI garnish.


The core answer to the user’s questions

Are retractions more common in non-society journals?

In this dataset, yes in raw counts, but not as a rate. Non-society/unclassified records dominate: 52,919 valid dated records vs 17,670 society-linked records. But because we do not know total publication output, we cannot say non-society journals have a higher probability of retraction.

Is fraud more common in non-society journals?

It depends on the fraud definition.

Fraud definitionSociety-linkedNon-society / unclassifiedInterpretation
Narrow fraud/misconduct23.6%7.0%Higher in society-linked records
Expanded integrity abuse including paper mills and peer review31.6%50.7%Higher in non-society/unclassified records

Are some subjects more common in society vs non-society retractions?

Yes. Society-linked retractions are more concentrated in biology/life sciences and physical sciences/engineering, but still represent a minority of records in every broad subject. Non-society/unclassified records dominate health, computing, social sciences, environmental sciences, and paper-mill-heavy clusters.

Have retractions proceeded at a similar pace over time?

No. Society-linked records show conference-driven spikes in 2010 and 2011 if all records are included. After removing conference records, society-linked journal records are relatively smaller and steadier. Non-society/unclassified records show huge recent spikes, especially 2023, driven by publisher-wide cleanup and paper-mill-related patterns.

Are retractions from some countries more common in society vs non-society journals?

Among retracted records, yes. The United States, Japan, South Korea, Italy, France, Canada, and Spain have higher society-linked shares. China, India, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, and Ethiopia have lower society-linked shares and much larger non-society/unclassified concentrations.

Are articles from some countries in some specific journals retracted more often?

Yes, in database-count terms. China dominates many large non-society journal clusters in Hindawi and related computational/medical-engineering journals. The United States dominates several society-linked biomedical clusters such as Journal of Biological Chemistry, PNAS, Science, and Cancer Research. India appears strongly in non-society computational and fuzzy-systems journals.


Final interpretation: two retraction cultures

The database suggests two broad retraction cultures.

1. The society-linked correction culture

Smaller in count, slower in median lag, enriched for:

  • image concerns,
  • narrow misconduct/fraud labels,
  • older biomedical and life-science cases,
  • institutional investigations,
  • long-tail forensic corrections,
  • prominent society journals.

This is the slow detective novel of retraction: gels, blots, institutional committees, missing raw data, correspondence, old claims, careful excavation.

2. The non-society/unclassified correction culture

Much larger in count, faster in many recent clusters, enriched for:

  • paper mills,
  • compromised peer review,
  • computer-generated content,
  • journal/publisher investigations,
  • special-issue failures,
  • large batch retractions,
  • strong country-journal clusters.

This is the factory-floor version of retraction: conveyor belts, audit tools, publisher sweeps, metadata anomalies, suspicious review networks, and whole stacks of papers falling at once.

Neither world is innocent. They fail differently.

Society journals do not magically prevent fraud. Non-society journals do not automatically produce lower-quality science. But the failure modes differ. Society-linked retractions look older, deeper, and more forensic. Non-society/unclassified retractions look larger, faster, and more industrial.

That is the real lesson: the retraction landscape is not divided between saints and sinners. It is divided between different publishing ecologies, each with its own vulnerabilities.

Some errors hide in old blots.
Some arrive in paper-mill batches.
Some wear the badge of a learned society.
Some ride through a mega-publisher pipeline.

Science corrects itself, yes, but the correction machinery has many engines. Some are scalpels. Some are bulldozers. 🔬📊