Should a book chapter be republished as a peer-reviewed article with no attribution?

An entire book chapter from a popular science trade book has been published as an "Original Research Article" in Frontiers in Psychiatry. The article appears as part of a Research Topic on Alternative Models of Addiction in Frontiers in Addictive Disorders and Behavioral Dyscontrol, a specialty section within Frontiers in Psychiatry.I downloaded the provisional PDF and was initially tipped off by the curious citation style and copious use of footnotes, unlike the standard reference list seen in journal articles (e.g., APA format). I looked for a mention of the published book but could not find it anywhere. Perhaps this will be corrected in later editions of the article (if any).The book is copyrighted (see below), but the nearly identical article is covered by a Creative Commons agreement, which states that the open-access text can be freely cited with attribution.- click on images to enlarge -Chapter 3Here's the Introduction, which is identical to Chapter 3 of the book (see above image).Frontiers in Addictive Disorders and Behavioral DyscontrolBut here's an abstract that might be unique to the Frontiers article (Satel & Lillienfeld, 2013):The notion that addiction is a ''brain disease'' has become widespread and rarely challenged.The brain disease model implies erroneously that the brain is necessarily the most important and useful level of analysis for understanding and treating addiction. This paper will explain the limits of over-medicalizing -- while acknowl...
Source: The Neurocritic - Category: Psychiatrists and Psychologists Authors: Source Type: blogs