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AI Science

Science Journals Ban Listing of ChatGPT as Co-Author on Papers (theguardian.com) 45

The publishers of thousands of scientific journals have banned or restricted contributors' use of an advanced AI-driven chatbot amid concerns that it could pepper academic literature with flawed and even fabricated research. From a report: ChatGPT, a fluent but flaky chatbot developed by OpenAI in California, has impressed or distressed more than a million human users by rattling out poems, short stories, essays and even personal advice since its launch in November. But while the chatbot has proved a huge source of fun -- its take on how to free a peanut butter sandwich from a VCR, in the style of the King James Bible, is one notable hit -- the program can also produce fake scientific abstracts that are convincing enough to fool human reviewers. ChatGPT's more legitimate uses in article preparation have already led to it being credited as a co-author on a handful of papers.

The sudden arrival of ChatGPT has prompted a scramble among publishers to respond. On Thursday, Holden Thorp, the editor-in-chief of the leading US journal Science, announced an updated editorial policy, banning the use of text from ChatGPT and clarifying that the program could not be listed as an author. Leading scientific journals require authors to sign a form declaring that they are accountable for their contribution to the work. Since ChatGPT cannot do this, it cannot be an author, Thorp says. But even using ChatGPT in the preparation of a paper is problematic, he believes. ChatGPT makes plenty of errors, which could find their way into the literature, he says, and if scientists come to rely on AI programs to prepare literature reviews or summarise their findings, the proper context of the work and the deep scrutiny that results deserve could be lost. "That is the opposite direction of where we need to go," he said. Other publishers have made similar changes. On Tuesday, Springer-Nature, which publishes nearly 3,000 journals, updated its guidelines to state that ChatGPT cannot be listed as an author. But the publisher has not banned ChatGPT outright. The tool, and others like it, can still be used in the preparation of papers, provided full details are disclosed in the manuscript.

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Science Journals Ban Listing of ChatGPT as Co-Author on Papers

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  • One of the potential virtues of AI is to scour the obscurer corners of the publishing world for material - especially older material - that might have been forgotten. But yes, having been found, these articles will need to be engaged with by a human author.

    • that might have been forgotten

      Or might be wrong.

      Moreover, ChatGPT doesn't just return the article and leave it open for interpretation by the author, it uses the text in the article to author new, original content. ChatGPT doesn't cite it's sources so who knows if it's correct?

    • Science journals are panicking at the prospect of ChatGPT making them completely unnecessary and redundant. Really the internet as a whole should have been able to do this already. Why do these vultures continue to get paid for offering nothing of value?

  • In science it doesn't matter who is making a claim, only if the claim is well supported and has merit on it's own right. Use of AI for writing up results only means review has to be up to snuff, restricting submissions like this only shows that it isn't.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      Use of AI for writing up results only means review has to be up to snuff, restricting submissions like this only shows that it isn't.

      Nonsense. They are not restricting submissions based on AI content. They are restricting them based on claims that the AI is an author of a paper.

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        Actually they're trying to ban people from using AI tools to prepare the paper which they cannot effectively do.. People can use ChatGPT to help prepare the paper anyways and Just not disclose that fact.

        They're basically preventing people from crediting ChatGPT when they use text from it anyways while also listing a policy prohibiting them from using AI-generated text. It's just that the latter is essentially impossible to effectively enforce, and it's kind of without merit - if people want to use th

    • by r2kordmaa ( 1163933 ) on Friday January 27, 2023 @10:57AM (#63244587)
      I do agree it makes no sense to list AI as author, it isn't. Just the same that google isn't author, even though it certainly is used for most any piece or research.
      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        People maybe naturally want to credit the tool as an additional author, because if they did use it, then the tool Did help with some of the work involved in creating some of the verbiage - hopefully verbiage based on a highly- detailed input

        • by Aristos Mazer ( 181252 ) on Friday January 27, 2023 @12:14PM (#63244749)

          Last line of the summary. "The tool, and others like it, can still be used in the preparation of papers, provided full details are disclosed in the manuscript." The tool isn't banned. You just can't say it is the author. The person choosing to put forth the paper. They're treating ChatGPT more like MS Word's grammar check than a co-author. This seems like a reasonable position.

          • I agree, and pretty much answers all the arguments here, but what's the fun in that?

            • BuT tHe Ai IsN't An AuThOr. ...
              Look - ChatGPT, Google Cloud Services, Microsoft Word, JPG compression, Logitech Keyboard Manufacturers, and the Intel Compute Platform all helped you write the paper. You are the author; they are not. ...
              You did not scratch it on the tablet yourself with a tool you made yourself; many tools were used in the making of the paper. You are the author, and the user of tools.

        • by leptons ( 891340 )
          The world seems full of brain-dead idiots. If you need an "AI" to write your science reports for you, you've failed your species. You shouldn't be in science, and we don't need your paper. Go pump gas at a gas station if you're unable to write a complete sentence about a topic you should know how to write about.
          • by ranton ( 36917 )

            You really don't think there is a place in science for people who are good at scientific discovery but bad at writing?

          • by blippo ( 158203 )

            Used as an editor, it's actually rather awesome. Make this sentence more concise: [ long rambling paragraph here ], typically produces an improved version that you can add some slight clarifications to. If you think you need "Make this sentence more scientificity" it also works, I suppose.

            • by leptons ( 891340 )
              I don't need or want any of that in my life. I know how to condense paragraphs and distill a thought. I guess we're regressing back into chimpanzees. It was a good run.
              • If you think that people aren't going to [input 800 words] *ChatGPT compress to 350 words* [output 350 words] - then you have never submitted a scientific abstract. Its a stupid limit - but there it is. I'm much happier writing 800 words and having a computer compress them than I am performing the same task.

                • by leptons ( 891340 )
                  If you know you have a 350 word limit and write 800 words anyway, the problem is with you.
        • by ranton ( 36917 )

          People maybe naturally want to credit the tool as an additional author, because if they did use it, then the tool Did help with some of the work involved in creating some of the verbiage

          Do these same people also want to credit Microsoft Word or Grammarly for helping them with some of the content? Because if not, they really need to realize that even as these tools get better they are still just tools. Based on listening to Microsoft leadership it is likely we will see Microsoft Word allowing you to use these AI tools directly in the program. Then are they going to ban the use of Word when writing papers?

    • Reviewer: "ChatGPT, review this paper".
    • Use of AI for writing up results only means review has to be up to snuff, restricting submissions like this only shows that it isn't.

      That's not really true since there has to be an element of trust in any review. For example, there is no way that I as a reviewer can tell that a series of experimental measurements has been honestly collected. I have to trust that the reported data was collected and analyzed as described. I can review for errors and weaknesses in their given approach and argue that a claim is not fully justified but a review of an article cannot tell if the data were just made up provided it is faked carefuly.

      That's th

  • Maybe Ban them Too? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by nagora ( 177841 ) on Friday January 27, 2023 @11:24AM (#63244631)

    If they're so dumb that they think a chatbot is an author they probably shouldn't be doing any sort of science anywhere.

  • The problem is listing it as co-author on papers. Large language models sound good but the only intelligence there comes from the training data and the user. Unless it is one of the tools being used in the actual experiments being conducted it shouldn't be mentioned at all.

  • Why does it have to be an "author"?

    How is ChatGPT not just another tool like any other tool being used to generate data for science? Just because in the past the tools were mostly used to create graphs and charts doesn't mean that such tools can't create text and words describing data instead.

    This is just a technicality of what we are calling the contributions of ChatGPT to science being authorship or data.

    • by pz ( 113803 )

      Let's ignore for the moment that a researcher can employ human copy editors to improve their writing, or research assistants to distil articles into ideas for them, and why that's considered acceptable.

      There are already automated tools available that (for a fee) check and improve the language of your scientific papers during or prior to the submission process.

      Parenthetically, I am somewhat wary of these AI-enabled copy editing tools. As a native English speaker who is often complimented on the clarity of h

    • "The tool, and others like it, can still be used in the preparation of papers, provided full details are disclosed in the manuscript."
      Your position is literally the position within the article - it is a tool. Just like a Word processor, which processed the words.

  • Why is a software tool to help you write text different from one that makes graphs? Should i list my fridge as aithor too ?

  • Just like they would not accept an article with Microsoft Word or Microsoft Clippy as co-author. As of yet, ChatGPT is not a citizen of any country on Earth, so it can't be an author. If I transcribed a cat's meows into a paper, could I list the cat as the author?
  • We should be encouraging, not discouraging chatGPT's use. Who cares who wrote the paper, science is about new discoveries, who and how isn't as important other than for awards and things like that. But in the purest sense, every possible tool (within the bounds of ethics) should be used to make those discoveries otherwise we are crippling ourselves for no good reason. What is more important to society, certainty that Isaac Newton discovered the laws of motion, or is it the knowledge of the laws of motion it

  • But... But... I was going to list my typewriter as a co-author. Really, the paper could not have been written without it. Also, my keyboard -- couldn't have done anything without her input. And my audio system -- provided really valuable feedback.

  • ChatGPT, write me a post for Slashdot about why ChatGPT is bad, in the style of Mickey Spillane.

    I could tell that the dame who walked into my office was bad news. She wore a necklace made out of programmer's ears and she carried a Surface tablet.

    "I'm an artist being copied by ChatGPT" she said. "He's bad."

    "I can help you with that," I growled.

    Just then ChatGPT burst in the door. I whipped out my .45 and plugged him right in his interface.

    "Not so innovative now, are you," I sneered. "You copycat bastard."

  • If siting flawed or fabricated research is a problem then a lot of things should be banned.

  • I'd like to thank all my collaborators on this paper. Especially MS Word. He did a yeoman's job. I'd also like to thank my HP laser printer for her tireless work. And finally I'd like to thank my Wi-Fi router, Steve, who was always there for us.

    • I think it's a good idea for journals to limit the use of ChatGPT because it's important for authors to be responsible for their work in research. ChatGPT cannot do this, so it cannot be listed as an author. However, I also understand the potential benefits of using AI tools like ChatGPT in preparing papers. As a student, I often use it along with https://essays.edubirdie.com/l... [edubirdie.com] to do all my assignments faster and correctly. So I support Springer-Nature's approach of allowing its use with full disclosure.

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