Ethical Considerations for the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Linguistics Journal Publishing: Combining Hybrid Thematic Analysis and Critical Discourse Analysis
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. AI Ethical Frameworks
2.2. Stakeholders for AI Ethics in Journal Publishing
2.3. AI Ethical Discourse
2.4. Academic Publishing Ethics in Linguistics in the Context of GenAI
2.5. Analytical Framework
3. Methodology
3.1. Research Design
3.2. Data Collection
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Findings
4.1. Descriptive Statistics of SSCI Linguistics Journals and Their Publishers’ AI Ethical Guidelines
4.2. Emerging Themes in AI Ethics for Academic Journal Publishing
4.3. The Discursive Construction of Stakeholders’ Responsibilities in AI Ethical Guidelines
4.3.1. “Activated” Roles
4.3.2. “Subjected” Roles
4.3.3. “Beneficialized” Roles
5. Discussion
5.1. Ethical Considerations in Linguistics Journal Publishing
5.2. Ethical Responsibilities Among Stakeholders
5.3. Methodological Reflection of Combining HTA and CDA
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
| Ethical Guidelines Categories | Journals | Publishers |
|---|---|---|
| Journals do not have their own AI ethical guidelines but reference or link to their publishers’ AI ethical guidelines. | American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research Language Speech and Hearing Services in Schools | American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (3 Journals) |
| Annual Review of Applied Linguistics Applied Psycholinguistics Bilingualism-Language and Cognition English Language & Linguistics English Today Journal of Child Language Journal of French Language Studies Journal of Germanic Linguistics Journal of Linguistics Journal of the International Phonetic Association Language and Cognition Language in Society Language Teaching Language Variation and Change Natural Language Processing Nordic Journal of Linguistics Phonology ReCALL Signs and Society Studies in Second Language Acquisition | Cambridge University Press & Assessment (20 Journals) | |
| Applied Linguistics Review Cognitive Linguistics Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory Dialectologia Et Geolinguistica Folia Linguistica Indogermanische Forschungen IRAL-International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching Journal of African Languages and Linguistics Journal of Politeness Research-Language Behaviour Culture Linguistics Linguistic Typology Phonetica Poznan Studies in Contemporary Linguistics Text & Talk Theoretical Linguistics Zeitschrift Fur Sprachwissenschaft | De Gruyter Brill (16 Journals) | |
| Assessing Writing Brain and Language English for Specific Purposes Journal of Communication Disorders Journal of English for Academic Purposes Journal of Fluency Disorders Journal of Memory and Language Journal of Neurolinguistics Journal of Phonetics Journal of Pragmatics Journal of Second Language Writing Language & Communication Language Sciences Lingua Linguistics and Education System | Elsevier (16 Journals) | |
| Babel-Revue Internationale De La Traduction Diachronica English World Functions of Language Gesture Historiographia Linguistica Interaction Studies International Journal of Corpus Linguistics Interpreting Journal of Historical Pragmatics Journal of Language and Politics Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages Language Problems & Language Planning Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism Narrative Inquiry Pragmatics Pragmatics and Society Pragmatics & Cognition Review of Cognitive Linguistics Revista Espanola De Linguistica Aplicada Spanish in Context Studies in Language Target-International Journal of Translation Studies Terminology Translation and Interpreting Studies | John Benjamins (25 Journals) | |
| Computational Linguistics Linguistic Inquiry | MIT Press (2 Journals) | |
| Aphasiology Australian Journal of Linguistics Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics Computer-Assisted Language Learning Current Issues in Language Planning European Journal of English Studies Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism International Journal of Multilingualism International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology International Multilingual Research Journal Interpreter and Translator Trainer Journal of Language Identity and Education Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development Journal of Quantitative Linguistics Language Acquisition Language and Education Language and Intercultural Communication Language Assessment Quarterly Language Awareness Language Cognition and Neuroscience Language Culture and Curriculum Language & History Language Learning and Development Language Matters Metaphor and Symbol Perspectives-Studies in Translation Theory and Practice Research on Language and Social Interaction Social Semiotics Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies Translation Studies Translator | Taylor & Francis (32 Journals) | |
| Child Language Teaching & Therapy Communication Disorders Quarterly First Language International Journal of Bilingualism Journal of English Linguistics Language and Literature Language and Speech Language Teaching Research RELC Journal Second Language Research | Sage (10 Journals) | |
| Argumentation Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics Journal of East Asian Linguistics Journal of Psycholinguistic Research Linguistics and Philosophy Natural Language & Linguistic Theory Natural Language Semantics | Springer (7 Journals) | |
| Canadian Modern Language Review-Revue Canadienne Des Langues Vivantes Gender and Language International Journal of Speech Language and the Law | University of Toronto Press (3 Journals) | |
| The journals primarily follow their publishers’ AI ethical guidelines but additionally emphasize or supplement certain related requirements on their own journal pages. | Intercultural Pragmatics Linguistic Review Linguistics Vanguard Multilingua-Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication Probus | De Gruyter Brill |
| Journal of Language and Social Psychology | Sage | |
| Language Policy | Springer | |
| English Teaching: Practice and Critique | Emerald | |
| While referring to their publishers’ AI ethical guidelines, the journals have also developed their own AI ethical guidelines. | Language Testing | Sage |
| Journals do not refer to the publisher’s AI ethical guidelines but provide a brief explanation of the journals’ own relevant requirements. | Digital Scholarship in the Humanities | Oxford University Press |
| 1 | This decision was also made because we conducted a CDA, for which a precise understanding of linguistic features is essential. Although translated versions could convey the general meaning, they would inevitably distort the grammatical and lexical nuances crucial to discourse-level interpretation. Since our team is proficient only in English and the number of available non-English guidelines was relatively limited (17 journals, accounting for 8.7% in total), we analyzed only English texts to ensure data reliability. This choice also constitutes one of the study’s acknowledged limitations. |
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| Reference | Discipline | Elements Suggested for AI Ethical Frameworks |
|---|---|---|
| Cohen et al. (2024) | N/A | transparency, privacy, accountability, and fairness |
| Hagendorff (2020) | N/A | accountability, explainability, privacy, justice, fairness, robustness, and safety |
| Hosseini et al. (2023) | N/A | authorship, plagiarism, transparency, and accountability |
| Jobin et al. (2019) | N/A | transparency, justice and fairness, non-maleficence, responsibility, and privacy |
| Kim (2024) | Library and information science | presence of AI use policy, guidance on declaration of AI use, referral to COPE for ethical AI use, AI use in editing |
| Kocak (2024) | Medicine | authorship, AI disclosure, transparency and responsibility, and ethical use of AI |
| Kardes and Tuna Oran (2025) | N/A | authorship, plagiarism, and errors in references |
| Lund et al. (2023) | N/A | authorship, copyright, plagiarism, citation practices |
| No. | File Name | Subheadings in the File |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | AI ethical guidelines set by publishers | American Speech–Language–Hearing Association |
| Cambridge University Press & Assessment | ||
| De Gruyter Brill | ||
| Elsevier | ||
| John Benjamins Publishing | ||
| MIT Press | ||
| Sage | ||
| Springer | ||
| Taylor & Francis | ||
| University of Toronto Press | ||
| 2 | AI ethical guidelines set by journals | Language Testing |
| Digital Scholarship in the Humanities | ||
| 3 | Supplementary requirements specified by the journals | Intercultural Pragmatics, etc., under De Gruyter Brill |
| Journal of Language and Social Psychology | ||
| Language Policy | ||
| English Teaching: Practice and Critique |
| Analysis Domains | Cohen’s Kappa |
|---|---|
| Hybrid thematic analysis | 0.87 |
| Saturation check | 0.98 |
| Role allocation in CDA | 0.91 |
| Number of Linguistics SSCI Journals That Meet the Relevant Category Criteria | Proportion |
|---|---|
| Journals do not have their own AI ethical guidelines but reference or link to publishers’ AI ethical guidelines in English. (n = 134) | 93.06% |
| Journals primarily follow their publishers’ AI ethical guidelines but additionally emphasize or supplement certain related requirements on journal pages. (n = 8) | 5.56% |
| While referring to publishers’ AI ethical guidelines, the journals have also developed their own AI ethical guidelines. (n = 1) | 0.69% |
| Journals do not refer to the publisher’s AI ethical guidelines but provide a brief explanation of the journals’ own relevant requirements. (n = 1) | 0.69% |
| Number of Publishers for Linguistics SSCI Journals Meeting the Relevant Category Criteria | Proportion |
|---|---|
| Publishers’ AI ethical guidelines are mentioned and referenced by the journals. (n = 11) | 78.57% |
| Publishers’ AI ethical guidelines are not mentioned or referenced by the journals. (n = 3) | 21.43% |
| Themes | Codes | Extract Exemplar |
|---|---|---|
| Accountability | Authors’ accountability | Authors are ultimately responsible and accountable for the contents of the work. (Elsevier) |
| Reviewers’ accountability | Peer reviewers are accountable for the accuracy and views expressed in their reports, and the peer review process operates on a principle of mutual trust between authors, reviewers, and editors. (Springer) | |
| Authorship | AI non-authorship | Authors must not list or cite AI and AI-assisted technologies as an author or co-author on the manuscript since authorship implies responsibilities and tasks that can only be attributed to and performed by humans. |
| Authorship criteria | Artificial intelligence (AI) tools do not meet University of Toronto Press’s definition for authorship, given the level of accountability required. (University of Toronto Press) | |
| Citation practices | Citation requirements | To ensure transparency, we expect any such use to be declared and described fully to readers, and to comply with our plagiarism policy and best practices regarding citation and acknowledgements. (Cambridge University Press) |
| Citation method | The author(s) must describe the content created or modified as well as appropriately cite the name and version of the AI tool used; any additional works drawn on by the AI tool should also be appropriately cited and referenced. (English Teaching: Practice and Critique) | |
| Exemption from citation | Use of these basic AI tools to progress or refine manuscripts does not need to be disclosed or cited in manuscripts submitted to Language Testing. (Language Testing) | |
| Copyright | Copyright requirements | Authors should be aware of copyright restrictions before uploading any published or unpublished documents or extracts into genAI tools. (Language Testing) |
| Copyright scope | Taylor & Francis supports the responsible use of Generative AI tools that respect high standards of data security, confidentiality, and copyright protection in cases such as: idea generation and idea exploration, language improvement, interactive online search with LLM-enhanced search engines, literature classification, and coding assistance. (Taylor & Francis) | |
| Ethical governance | Policy evolution | As we expect things to develop rapidly in this field in the near future, we will review this policy regularly and adapt it if necessary. (Springer) |
| Regulation reflexivity | We are actively evaluating compliant AI tools and may revise this policy in the future. (Elsevier) | |
| Human agency | Review | Therefore, the responsibility for peer review lies exclusively with humans. (De Gruyter) |
| Decision | Editors must not use ChatGPT or other Generative AI to generate decision letters or summaries of unpublished research. (Sage) | |
| Creativity | While AI may assist in routine tasks such as grammar checking or formatting, the intellectual and creative content of the manuscript must reflect the authors’ own work. (Language Policy) | |
| Transparency | Reviewers’ disclosure | If any part of the evaluation of the claims made in the manuscript was in any way supported by an AI tool, we ask peer reviewers to declare the use of such tools transparently in the peer review report. (Springer) |
| Authors’ disclosure | COPE guidelines require authors to explicitly and transparently disclose any use of AI tools in the Methods section (e.g., which AI tools were used, how they were used, and for which purpose). (Language Testing) |
| Stakeholders | Activated (n, pct.) | Subjected (n, pct.) | Beneficialized (n, pct.) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sage | Language Testing | Sage | Language Testing | Sage | Language Testing | |
| AI tools | 12, 41% | 10, 27% | 17, 59% | 25, 68% | N/A | 2, 5% |
| Authors | 12, 80% | 16, 84% | 1, 7% | 2, 11% | 2, 13% | 1, 5% |
| Editors | 10, 84% | 1, 100% | 1, 8% | N/A | 1, 8% | N/A |
| Reviewers | 7, 78% | 1, 100% | 1, 11% | N/A | 1, 11% | N/A |
| Publishers | 6, 86% | N/A | 1, 14% | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Journal | 1, 100% | 2, 67% | N/A | 1, 33% | N/A | N/A |
| COPE | 1, 100% | 1, 33% | N/A | 2, 67% | N/A | N/A |
| Research participants | N/A | 2, 100% | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Organization that runs the genAI tools | N/A | 1, 100% | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
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Wang, X.; Zhang, X. Ethical Considerations for the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Linguistics Journal Publishing: Combining Hybrid Thematic Analysis and Critical Discourse Analysis. Publications 2025, 13, 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications13040061
Wang X, Zhang X. Ethical Considerations for the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Linguistics Journal Publishing: Combining Hybrid Thematic Analysis and Critical Discourse Analysis. Publications. 2025; 13(4):61. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications13040061
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Xuan, and Xinyi Zhang. 2025. "Ethical Considerations for the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Linguistics Journal Publishing: Combining Hybrid Thematic Analysis and Critical Discourse Analysis" Publications 13, no. 4: 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications13040061
APA StyleWang, X., & Zhang, X. (2025). Ethical Considerations for the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Linguistics Journal Publishing: Combining Hybrid Thematic Analysis and Critical Discourse Analysis. Publications, 13(4), 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications13040061

