TY - JOUR AU - Maryam Sayab AU - Lisa M. DeTora AU - Muhammad Sarwar AB - Abstract A survey conducted by the Asian Council of Science Editors (ACSE) investigates how publication metrics may influence academic research integrity. With input from 720 researchers worldwide, the findings highlight a critical tension between metric-driven academic pressures and ethical research conduct. A notable proportion of respondents reported feeling compelled to compromise ethical standards, citing practices such as paid authorship, predatory publishing, and data falsification. Institutional incentives and publication requirements emerged as major contributing factors. Despite these concerns, there is strong momentum for reform, especially toward quality- and impact-based research evaluations. This article frames the findings in the broader context of academic culture and offers actionable recommendations for stakeholders, researchers, institutions, and publishers to collaboratively restore integrity at the heart of scholarly work.  Introduction The academic imperative to publish, often captured by the phrase “publish or perish,” has become a global phenomenon, exerting significant pressure on researchers at every career stage.1 From graduate students to senior faculty, the volume and frequency of publications are frequently tied to hiring decisions, promotions, funding, and institutional rankings. While these expectations aim to promote productivity and visibility, they can also blur the line between ethical scholarship and opportunistic behavior.1-4 In environments where institutional metrics reward quantity over quality, researchers may find themselves navigating a landscape fraught with ethical dilemmas. Practices such as guest authorship, submitting to predatory journals, or even manipulating data can arise not from a lack of awareness, but from systemic pressures embedded in academic evaluation structures.5-8 While much of the existing literature […] BT - Science Editor DA - 2025/08/11 DO - 10.36591/SE-4803-05 IS - 2 LA - en-US N2 - Abstract A survey conducted by the Asian Council of Science Editors (ACSE) investigates how publication metrics may influence academic research integrity. With input from 720 researchers worldwide, the findings highlight a critical tension between metric-driven academic pressures and ethical research conduct. A notable proportion of respondents reported feeling compelled to compromise ethical standards, citing practices such as paid authorship, predatory publishing, and data falsification. Institutional incentives and publication requirements emerged as major contributing factors. Despite these concerns, there is strong momentum for reform, especially toward quality- and impact-based research evaluations. This article frames the findings in the broader context of academic culture and offers actionable recommendations for stakeholders, researchers, institutions, and publishers to collaboratively restore integrity at the heart of scholarly work.  Introduction The academic imperative to publish, often captured by the phrase “publish or perish,” has become a global phenomenon, exerting significant pressure on researchers at every career stage.1 From graduate students to senior faculty, the volume and frequency of publications are frequently tied to hiring decisions, promotions, funding, and institutional rankings. While these expectations aim to promote productivity and visibility, they can also blur the line between ethical scholarship and opportunistic behavior.1-4 In environments where institutional metrics reward quantity over quality, researchers may find themselves navigating a landscape fraught with ethical dilemmas. Practices such as guest authorship, submitting to predatory journals, or even manipulating data can arise not from a lack of awareness, but from systemic pressures embedded in academic evaluation structures.5-8 While much of the existing literature […] PY - 2025 ST - Publication Pressure vs Research Integrity T2 - Science Editor TI - Publication Pressure vs Research Integrity: Global Insights from an Asian Council of Science Editors Survey UR - https://www.csescienceeditor.org/article/publication-pressure-vs-research-integrity-global-insights-from-an-asian-council-of-science-editors-survey/ VL - 48 Y2 - 2025-09-16 ER -