KEY TAKEAWAY
- More than 100 institutions have declared their support for eLife’s reviewed preprint model, following the journal’s loss of impact factor.

Rather than only accepting papers recommended for publication by peer reviewers, eLife publishes all reviewed research as reviewed preprints. However, Clarivate, the provider of Web of Science, only indexes peer reviewed content, resulting in the loss of eLife’s impact factor for 2025. Rather than changing their publishing model, eLife agreed to be partially indexed in Web of Science’s Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI). But how has this been received?
As reported in Research Information, eLife surveyed over 100 institutions and funders to assess how their publishing model is viewed. Over 95% of respondents endorsed non-traditional publishing approaches like eLife’s, confirming publications will continue to be factored into hiring, promotion, and funding decisions.
Promoting integrity or outdated metrics?
Dr Nandita Quaderi, Senior Vice President and Editor-in-Chief of the Web of Science at Clarivate, stressed that policies must be applied universally to protect research integrity. Quaderi warned that “cover-to-cover indexing of journals in which publication is decoupled from validation by peer review risks allowing untrustworthy actors to benefit from publishing poor quality content”.
On the other hand, Ashley Farley, Senior Officer of Knowledge & Research Services at the Gates Foundation, believes Web of Science’s policy “reinforces outdated publishing metrics that hinder innovation”, while Damian Pattinson, Executive Director at eLife, noted that with increasing emphasis on open science, “eLife remains confident that its model represents the future of scholarly publishing – one that prioritises scientific quality, transparency, and integrity over outdated prestige metrics”.
“eLife remains confident that its model represents the future of scholarly publishing – one that prioritises scientific quality, transparency, and integrity over outdated prestige metrics.”
– Damian Pattinson, eLife
As debates over the future of the impact factor continue, Farley believes that “indexers must evolve to support responsible, transparent models like eLife’s”.
—————————————————
Categories
