The second letter responds to Haunschild and Bornmann’s article in the Journal of Informetrics, which proposes a bibliometric method to identify “bright young scientists” based largely on publication counts in high-impact journals. This approach is not only flawed but likely to exacerbate existing distortions in science. Journal impact factors are aggregate metrics that cannot capture the quality, originality, or intellectual risk of individual work; using them as proxies for talent is a textbook ecological fallacy. More importantly, institutionalizing such criteria would intensify perverse incentives already at play. This proposal would accelerate hyperauthorship, strategic publishing, and superficial output. Far from identifying genuine talent, the proposed method risks systematically amplifying the very behaviors that undermine it. https://zenodo.org/records/19001905
PS - The 2026 Strait of Hormuz energy crisis did what years of sustainability advocacy could not: it made Europe's dependence on fossil-based construction materials impossible to ignore. The paradox is almost elegant: it took a fossil fuel crisis to make the case for leaving fossil fuels behind, and in its wake, bio-based construction materials finally emerged from niche experiments to serious contenders, offering a tangible path toward a more resilient and low-carbon built environment. https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202604.0356