This article details fFar from first example. Predatory journals, or Pay to 
Publish. Spread it around. If 
anyone asks you for money to publish hang up. Also check out editors, people 
who supposedly od 
peer review, are they in your field? The underside of Publish or Perish.

Fake Research Paper Based on Star Trek: Voyager's Worst Episode Was Published 
by a Scientific 
Journal

by James Whitbrook, I09 Gizmodo.com

“Threshold” is one of the most infamous Star Trek episodes ever. You know what’ 
we’re talking about
—the one with Warp 10 and the weird evolved amphibians. Well, it was also the 
recent subject of a 
fake scientific research paper submitted in a test to expose the ever-growing 
problem of “predatory” 
scientific journals.

An anonymous biologist looking to expose how easy it was to get fake news into 
supposedly peer-
reviewed scientific journals—inspired by a recent attempt that got a paper 
about Star Wars’ midi-
chlorians published in three different journals—recently submitted a paper 
titled “Rapid Genetic and 
Developmental Morphological Change Following Extreme Celerity.” The author was 
listed as “Doctor 
Lewis Zimmerman,” which is actually the name of the holoengineer that 
programmed Voyager’s 
Emergency Medical Hologram.

The paper was essentially a recap of the events of “Threshold,” the godawful 
season two episode in 
which Voyager’s helmsman Tom Paris attempts to break the theoretical “Warp 10” 
speed barrier, 
something never done in Trek’s universe. Turns out, it’s for good reason, 
because apparently when 
you do reach the “extreme celerity” of Warp 10, you turn into a weird 
amphibian-person, capture your 
captain, evolve them into a weird amphibian-person, and then fully evolve into 
actual space 
salamanders and mate with each other.

Look, there’s a reason even the people who made this episode call it a “real 
low point.”

But nonetheless, the paper—which, while obfuscating its language a bit, was 
still very clearly fake, 
including mentions of the transwarp barrier Paris breaks in the episode and 
even concluded by 
thanking the United Federation of Planets and Voyager producer Brannon 
Braga—was accepted by 
four different journals, and actually published in one, American Research 
Journal of Biosciences. 
According to a Space.com interview with the anonymous biologist who submitted 
the paper, the 
journal asked for just $50 to do so. ARJ have now pulled the text from their 
website in light of media 
reports discovering that the paper is essentially a fancier-worded Memory Alpha 
page.

In the world of science publishing, the rise of “predatory” journals and a lack 
of proper checks on the 
papers that get accepted into them is a growing, disconcerting problem. 
Multiple sting operations 
into exposing the issue—including an alarming report by journalist John 
Bohannon in 2015, who 
managed to get a scientifically accurate, but intentionally poor and 
catchily-presented study, into 
predatory journals that then went on to work its way into the media—have 
occurred in recent years.
But with efforts like this Trek-themed paper and last year’s midi-chlorian one, 
it shows that it’s not 
just poorly-conducted research making its way into journals, but blatantly 
false papers as well. In a 
time when public faith in science is more important than ever, practices that 
allow for jokey incidents 
like this to happen only help to erode public trust in even the best science 
publishing.

Edit: A previous version of this article referred to the beings Captain Janeway 
and Tom Paris evolve 
into as space-lizards, when they are in fact, space-amphibians. io9 regrets the 
error, and notes the 
delightful irony of scientific inaccuracy in a post about fake science.

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