“…Established and new scholars, from both developing and prestigious institutions alike, have fallen victim to predatory journals, an outcome which researchers theorize may be the product of both the “publish or perish” mentality of academia (i.e., where scholars are pressured to quickly publish research for tenure and promotion) and simple lack of guidance and training on how to identify a potentially predatory journal [ 2 , 3 , 6 , 11 , 12 ]. For researchers, the consequences of submitting manuscripts to a predatory journal are numerous and may include professional embarrassment, loss of publishing opportunities (i.e., publishing research in a predatory journal could prevent the research from being published elsewhere), a negative effect on their impact metrics (as predatory journals typically have fake or inexistent impact metrics, due to their inability to pass quality checks in reputed databases such as Web of Science Core Collection and Scopus), and loss of the money the researcher may have paid for the journal's article processing charge (APC) [ 4 , 5 , 13 ].…”