A CS researcher's unusually high h-index exposes an expansive citation network(retractionwatch.com)
retractionwatch.com
A CS researcher's unusually high h-index exposes an expansive citation network
https://retractionwatch.com/2026/05/27/h-index-citation-networks-retractions-special-issues/
4 comments
"Ruthlessly optimizing for metric X sounded great, but somehow that failed to give us outcome Y." -Anon
Is the CS community more prone to game metrics? I have a feeling most in the area would do that even if there weren’t any external incentives.
I’d go for prime palindromes.
I’d go for prime palindromes.
I don’t think so. Just in Retraction Watch there have been several similar stories about citation manipulation, perversion of the review process, and so on, in medicine, biology, and other fields. I don’t know whether these ugly practices are becoming more common or whether they are detected more frequently. If the former, it’s another signal of the decay of modern science.
> If the former, it’s another signal of the decay of modern science.
I'd say the incentives are misaligned.
I'd say the incentives are misaligned.