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SciPoll 639: Using AI in Science Publication
Is utilizing AI to help write science publications any different than using other assistive tools (i.e. Word, Excel, Tableau) or hiring individuals to assist?
Results
(241 Answers)
Answer Explanations
- Yesuser-284533Yes, although it is a digital tool, it is much more powerful and complex, and a lot more multifaceted.
- Yesuser-964888Definitely using AI is many many times efficient and time consuming.
- Yesuser-637083AI is generative meaning it can create content for the user. The others merely assist the user to create their own content.
- Yesuser-397183Word does not spew out crap that is then poorly edited and clogs up submission queues
- Nouser-290459it can help with grammar and flow.
- Yesuser-28192It produces results rather than helping reproduce them
- Yesuser-352486No. AI is suggesting entire paragraphs and sections of the paper.
By copying previous tagged work within its memory (Google) it will more than assist.
These will inevitably affect the actual intellectual content of the publication.
Not merely add a graphical figure etc.. - Yesuser-650602AI is like a grad student. Anything they write needs to be closely scrutized.
- Yesuser-574398AI appears to create a script based on algorithms likely unknown to the user, certainly out of the control of the user, and is not the work of the author. As an information gathering tool, AI has great promise but it is no substitute for human input or insight.
- Yesuser-615884Much more fast and accurate that the classical tools.
- Nouser-762237Using AI to support the writing of scientific publications is fundamentally similar to using other tools or hiring human help. Just as Word, Excel, and Tableau are advanced tools that streamline and enhance the writing, data analysis, and visualization processes, AI provides sophisticated capabilities to support and augment these tasks.
Tools like Word, Excel, and Tableau automate document creation, data analysis, and visualization, respectively. AI takes this further by automating more complex tasks such as language refinement, data interpretation, and creating insightful summaries. The goal remains the same: to save time and reduce manual effort for researchers. In addition, AI can make suggestions, identify errors, and offer new perspectives, improving the overall quality and clarity of scientific publications.
In addition, tools and hired experts ensure consistency and accuracy in scientific work. Similarly, AI can maintain a high standard of consistency in language usage and data interpretation throughout a publication. By minimizing human error, AI contributes to the accuracy and reliability of scientific communication.
On the other hand, the ethical considerations for using AI are similar to those for other assistive tools and human assistance. Transparency in the use of AI, proper attribution of AI contributions, and adherence to ethical guidelines ensure that the use of AI is responsible and consistent with standards of scientific integrity.
In summary, the integration of AI into the scholarly publication process is consistent with the ongoing evolution of assistive technologies. - Yesuser-276088AI, in particular generative AI, uses compilation of various source data and also generates new content. However it can also invent incorrect information, hence human knowledge is still important fir source data verification
- Yesuser-475346The other assistive tools seem more benign because they are a bit more focused on spelling and grammar, with occasional suggestions for word choice in some of the iterations (even such as the one that suggests word endings within the program I'm typing now for this SciPinion response!). A generative AI program is able to pull together data in novel ways and develop new assessments/analyses and may even make initial conclusions. If not edited appropriately, this could lead to problems if the conclusions from the AI program are not necessarily supported by the data, a situation which has been demonstrated to happen in many circumstances currently. Hopefully the peer reviewers would catch this, but potentially not if they are overwhelmed by the increased number of manuscripts submitted because of the decreased human effort needed to create them.
- Yesuser-907425Other formats translate the whims of the author into print. AI is intended to provide the 'whims'.
- Yesuser-740731AI can help improve the language for non-native English speakers
- Yesuser-81297I believe that it is not different if people continue to control the AI output and correct it. Unfortunately, sometimes AI is used to replace and not to assist, leading to improvements in quantity but lowering the quality.
- Yesuser-245397The AI tools such as QuilliBot for summarising, paraphrasing etc are very useful and they can be incorporated successfully on the writing of articles and grants.
- Yesuser-404499assistive tools provide simply mechanical/technical help. AI has a "mind of itself" and brings in additional knowledge or literature-based opinion and thus can produce a statement which is different from the original statement.
- Yesuser-905470It makes the process faster, and gives you a wall to bounce ideas off
- Yesuser-638389It is useful IF you are 100% sure of the context as AI makes unnoticeable errors to the novice.
- Yesuser-144795makes life easier, do not need to read too many manuals.
- Yesuser-613823This is not a yes or no type of question. I checked Yes because it is more effective than Word. I find it very helpful.
- Nouser-52862So far, AI-assisted tools are exactly that - tools. Like any other tool, it does not make sense not to use them if they will result in higher performance and quality output. New tools bring new potential which in turn allows humans to expand more effort in higher creative functions.
- Yesuser-840552There is a significant difference between using AI's assistance in writing science publications and other assistive tools (such as Word, Excel, Tableau) or hiring individuals to assist. Scientific publications are a knowledge product out of research experiments, and projects carried out after gaining sound knowledge in any field of study or under the supervision of some experts on the knowledge field. It is the result of a comprehensive and methodical process that involves several key stages such as identifying a specific problem, formulating the research question or hypothesis, carrying out the planned experiments or modeling, data collection and analysis, interpretation of result and analysis, writing the manuscript, peer review, revision and resubmission, and publication and dissemination. Each of these stages requires careful planning, execution, and documentation. Using AI tools at any of these steps without cross-validation of the results it generates can compromise the integrity and credibility of the scientific publication. Over-reliance on AI tools can hamper some of the essential skills researchers require. For instance, younger researchers might not develop strong writing, critical thinking, or data analysis skills if they depend too heavily on AI. Moreover, AI systems can perpetuate and even amplify existing biases present in the training data. For example, say an AI tool is used for writing literature reviews or data analysis, it might favor heavily cited articles and their viewpoints or ignore important but relatively less cited publications. Thus, in my opinion, AI's assistance in writing scientific publications should be limited to certain activities such as: checking for grammatical errors, clarity and coherence of already written sentences, formatting references, and checking for compliance with journal guidelines, among others.
- Nouser-543438AI text is the intellectual property of the AI device that created the text. It would be the same as plagiarizing someone else's manuscript.
- Yesuser-99098The level of help is much much higher than other assistive tools. It can check the text for style, or summarise, etc.
I would be pretty similar to hiring a high level researcher to assist, which I have never done. The barrier is much lower. - Yesuser-678105Large language models (LLMs) do the learning and writing. The person is not going the process of learning and memorization.
- Yesuser-598239AI is not an "ordinary" assistive tool. Hallucinations possible/likely with AI
- Nouser-14860I believe that scientific publications should be wrote just by who developed it.
- Yesuser-374109AI does not "reason" it simply regurgitates.
- Yesuser-979715Using AI is obviously different than using Word or Excel to help in one's writing, since those provide minimal support related mainly to spelling, grammar, and the like. Hiring another person to assist is a bit more complicated. I think that the latter is OK as long as the assistance is limited to assistance with correct language (usually English) usage and help with clarification of key information, ideas, and hypotheses being present in the paper. Authors should acknowledge such assistance when submitting the manuscript. AI, however, is an unknown resource in terms of what it may produce, and authors might easily be tempted to assume that the AI algorithm has some kind of "expertise" in the subject area of the paper that, in fact, is lacking.
- Yesuser-911600Deeper search into publications
- Yesuser-11084Scientific publications are meant to be unique and original works not a rehash of previous thoughts and phrases
- Nouser-444605AI will not generate good ideas which has to be done by Scientists. AI will not do the experimental study, analyse and above all interpret the data. The manuscript writing is just a language skill which AI can compensaate
- Yesuser-287804Ai is way more advanced and not only make corrections and suggests words; i wrote whole sentences and concepts.
- Yesuser-669208It is different, because it modifies your text. In most cases it helps, but sometimes it changes the intended idea and even provide misleading statements, etc.
- Nouser-409588In its current form, it’s just a tool.
- Yesuser-684526I think it makes authors lazy so that they do not interact with their data and writing as much as they should. I don't believe in banning AI, but it does have downsides that need to be addressed.
- Nouser-597118It is a tool, if used responsibly should not pose any risks
- Yesuser-507408Any assistance in grammar and sentence formations using AI is more than technical assistive tools such as Word. However, it is similar to sutuations such as hiring human individuals to assist.
- Not sureuser-445218If the AI hallucinates it is typically untrackable and different than a person making an error.
- Yesuser-696023AI is based on the statistics of word flow, with no relevance to argumentation, logic or truthfulness. Therefore, AI is nonspecific, sometimes incorrect, it lies, and has no basis in rationale; at least one of these is present in human coworkers.
- Yesuser-445202As ferramentas de apoio são mais robustas, exigem mais conhecimento do escritor
- Yesuser-554477The authors should be doing the analysis and writing - if AI is writing an article then the authors cannot copyright the publication. It is not theirs, it is AI's.
- Yesuser-773905.
- Yesuser-673903Using Excel, Word, etc does not write your work. AI writes articles, precluding the ability of the authors, especially younger academics to be creative and able to express their work. It short circuits analytical thought and creative thinking so essential in training stages.
- Not sureuser-544555It depends... If what it produces is critiqued and checked (references checked, analyses verified, etc.), then no, but if one uses it to do the analyses, etc. and there is no critical overview, then no.
Individuals can take responsibility, but AI cannot. - Yesuser-561071Yes. AI, most of the time, generates new ideas that supersede the original idea of humans.
- Yesuser-810586has a different level of involvement
- Yesuser-67936While word may offer corrections to spelling and grammar, generative AI collects, reviews, and collates information before producing content to the user.
- Yesuser-987379AI platforms generate unique text using the online resources.
- Yesuser-123746AI has many advantages over the ordinary assistive methods in scientific writing. It can deal with large volume of information, summarize, extract outline, suggest useful questions, put plans, reformulate text …etc
- Nouser-689910This is an issue of fairness. There are some data (and many opinions) that manuscripts submitted for publication that are not well written, often from individuals whose knowledge of scientific english is limited, are less likely to be sent out for peer-review, and less likely to be accepted. If we are truly committed to fairness in scientific peer-review, we should actually encourage the use of AI to assist in drafting manuscripts.
- Yesuser-266855Ai is generating content which needs to be verified by the author other applications like Word and Excel only evaluate the content provided by the author.
- Not sureuser-874889I didn't try AI before in writing scientific papers.
- Yesuser-799639Writing a publication is the author(s) responsibility. Improving the quality of a paper by the use of assistance tools involves the author work and prove the level of capabilities of the author, giving the credits to the author(s). AI as a robotic component by definition can not have any responsibility for the developed product (publication).
- Yesuser-41956With assistive tools, the author decides whether to accept or use the suggested alternative. In AI, the algorithm makes the decision. However, I am seeing the line between the two becoming blurred.
- Yesuser-480376None of the other 'assistive tools' compose text.
- Yesuser-935064On the margins, using ghost writers can be argued to pose similar problems, especially of attribution -- that is, the authors may not actually possess the knowledge to make the claims they make in their work. At least currently, AI seems prone to make stuff up. For example, generate citations that do not actually exist. Authors should for ethical reasons read every citations that rely on, but alas, there appear to be those who test the bounds of ethical behaviours. To soften the criticism, one powerful and essential contribution of AI derives from the ability to find pattern in so called big data. So long as authors explain the prompts they used that helped them find patterns, great. But they must exercise care in evaualtion output to avoid promoting spurious coincidences that are divorsed of causality.
- Yesuser-731405This speeds up your work and allows you to formulate your thoughts better, especially if English is not your first language.
- Not sureuser-902187While the term AI has become ubiquitous, its use is still relatively new. Many of the nuances are still unknown.
- Yesuser-779737those things do not write the paper for you, they just make sure what you wrote is grammatically correct, etc. AI writing is not original thought.
- Yesuser-383159AI tools tend to produce unreliable or shallow answers to prompts.
- Yesuser-834001Using AI makes the process faster and more efficient.
- Not sureuser-200863I need to know more about it as at this time I am not how it works and does. I think, if it is like using Word or Excel then it is OK with me. However, if it actually does everything for you taking the data and spitting into final manuscripts or reports then it may fall into ghost writing or even beyond. It is too early to say yes or no.
- Nouser-330322No, it is no different than hiring individuals to assist.
- Yesuser-940891People don't understand the limitations of AI, and therefore fail to take responsibility.
- Yesuser-586801AI will provide the information quicker than any other person!
- Nouser-642018It is not different. AI is a tool to assist or speed up scientific research
- Yesuser-809947Time saving and more relavant information
- Yesuser-195990You can't trust the output of an AI currently, so it is the responsibility of the author to check it thoroughly. Unfortunately, it seems that this is not always done. The use of AIs also contributes to an overload of submissions, since papers can be prepared very quickly. This is good if you are in a publish or perish state. This in turn drowns reviewers and leads to shoddy reviewing. On top of that, AIs learn from poor papers produced by other AIs, causing a bewildering lack of trust. If you've read or seen "The 3 body problem", the aliens halt all scientific progress on Earth by obfuscating experimental results. To quote an old Pogo cartoon, "We have seen the enemy and they is us".
- Yesuser-785535Possible inconsistency in IA output if questions and topics are affered in different ways
- Yesuser-987162yes,it provides information about the topic
- Yesuser-146796because AI is not original work, it is predictive algorithm pulling from other published work
- Yesuser-548892It Is not using your own original idea or initiative, but technologically generated.Which has the chances of distorting your idea
- Nouser-156666To write scientific publication needs all scientific ascept that it not possible by AI
- Yesuser-164821Word and Excel does not make up fake references out of nowhere..
- Yesuser-560974It generates new content from complex relationships of concepts and ideas, which the author may not ever come up with otherwise.
- Yesuser-79668It provided more streamlined and comprehensive information
- Yesuser-111454Assistive tools only help to make your work faster by helping to reorganize and reproduce the results of data fed into them. However, the AI will conceptualize and carry out a task without the individual's input.
- Nouser-478855If used for correcting the style or grammar, I see no difference. Of course, I am an experimental scientist, and AI can not make up my experiments for me (although, it may help with ideas for experiments, but that is a different story)
- Yesuser-885754AI is prone to overestimating responses in its outputs.
- Yesuser-65167It is particularly useful for non native english speakers
- Yesuser-544906Faster and 24x7 available
- Yesuser-583633The use of AI in writing an article makes the process faster, more efficient and possibly more accurate.
- Not sureuser-764272Yes and no ... It depends how it is used. If the author gives ai the content to rewrite in a format that works for publications then it's exactly like other assistive tools. If it's asked to create something from anything it has access to then it could create something questionable.
- Yesuser-887652AI (typically in the form of LLMs) is a heap of word association occurrences being sorted very quickly. It is imitation, not writing.
- Not sureuser-284769AI may be helpful as a tool, although quite different to, say, Word. The latter is little different from a pen in its essence, whereas AI pretends to be 'creative'. Hired individuals is another story. If a 'scientist' is incapable to write his publication he must not be among the authors and better pursue artisan endeavours.
- Yesuser-765807Utilizing AI to assist in writing science publications does have some differences compared to using other tools or hiring individuals. Let’s explore these distinctions:
- Automation and Scale: AI can automate tasks at a larger scale than individual assistants. It can process vast amounts of data, generate summaries, and even draft sections of manuscripts. This efficiency is challenging to achieve manually.
- Objective vs. Subjective: AI tools operate objectively based on algorithms and patterns. Human assistants may introduce subjectivity, personal biases, or interpretations. Researchers need to be aware of this distinction.
- Learning and Adaptation: AI systems can learn from existing literature and adapt over time. They improve with more data and feedback. In contrast, human assistants have fixed knowledge and skills.
- Ethical Considerations: AI raises ethical questions related to transparency, accountability, and bias. Researchers must ensure that AI-generated content aligns with ethical standards.
- Collaboration: AI can complement human efforts. Researchers can collaborate with AI tools to enhance productivity and quality.
- Yesuser-35749It provide ideas
- Nouser-232098Although, its similar with other assistive tools but it differs significantly in ethical considerations, the potential for bias, and the necessity for transparency and validation
- Nouser-634057Language models can't really create content without substance, so assuming authors have real research substance to publish, the language model in this case would only facilitate writing or telling the story of the results using a specific style as prompted by the authors.
- Yesuser-952116Used without critical thinking, AI can create a whole publication from scratch - no other tool existing today can achieve that. In this sense it is more than a tool and becomes more like a virtual collaborator.
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