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posted by hubie on Friday February 03 2023, @01:51AM   Printer-friendly
from the can-ChatGPT-be-a-reviewer? dept.

But Springer Nature, which publishes thousands of scientific journals, says it has no problem with AI being used to help write research — as long as its use is properly disclosed:

Springer Nature, the world's largest academic publisher, has clarified its policies on the use of AI writing tools in scientific papers. The company announced this week that software like ChatGPT can't be credited as an author in papers published in its thousands of journals. However, Springer says it has no problem with scientists using AI to help write or generate ideas for research, as long as this contribution is properly disclosed by the authors.

"We felt compelled to clarify our position: for our authors, for our editors, and for ourselves," Magdalena Skipper, editor-in-chief of Springer Nature's flagship publication, Nature, tells The Verge. "This new generation of LLM tools — including ChatGPT — has really exploded into the community, which is rightly excited and playing with them, but [also] using them in ways that go beyond how they can genuinely be used at present."

[...] Skipper says that banning AI tools in scientific work would be ineffective. "I think we can safely say that outright bans of anything don't work," she says. Instead, she says, the scientific community — including researchers, publishers, and conference organizers — needs to come together to work out new norms for disclosure and guardrails for safety.

Originally spotted on The Eponymous Pickle.


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  • (Score: 2) by looorg on Friday February 03 2023, @01:46PM

    by looorg (578) on Friday February 03 2023, @01:46PM (#1290011)

    Sweet. Facebook created Science-Tay the anti-vaxx-bot. Somehow I don't see them unpausing it for the public anytime soon. I guess this is the big thing, AI can't at the moment hold and reason around an argument. It can only identify key words and then parrot them back. To some, and apparently in some cases, this might go over and appear reasonable to some people. Or any/many people at just a quick glance. But once you actually read it then it is just exposed for the complete mess that it is.

    It's been tried here at work for the last month or so as teachers was having a panic about students cheating with ChatGPT. None of them have been able to produce a solid and good paper as of yet, there have been a lot of horrible once and some that sort of didn't seem so bad at a glance. A lot of them are just word rambling as it tries to include everything it things is important and correct. But it can't set those things in context or relation to each other. Papers that could hold an actual argument or compare a few things to each other? None. Actual good papers? None. Not a single one. The current conclusion is that the best case scenario so far is to sort of have the ChatGPT paper as a base to dig up the basics or generic information that you then work and develop. But then since it's so basic you should have just gotten it by reading the books or going to the lecture. Perhaps the upside is that now the students actually have to read the books so they can check the work of their ChatGPT paper so they don't get busted for obvious plagiarism and cheating.

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