A Rapid Investigation of Artificial Intelligence Generated Content Footprints in Scholarly Publications PDF
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Tang, Gengyan; Eaton, Sarah Elaine
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Summary
This study reports on a novel phenomenon observed in scholarly publications. Research articles unrelated to artificial intelligence-generated content contain phrases like 'As an AI language model...'. The authors call this 'AIGC footprints' and analyzed 25 articles published by authors from Central and South Asia and Africa.
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EBSCO Export LongDbName: Canadian Reference Centre ShortDbName: rch AN: 178237798 Title: A Rapid Investigation of Artificial Intelligence Generated Content Footprints in Scholarly Publications. PublicationDate: 20240701 Contributors: Tang, Gengyan; Eaton, Sarah Elaine; DocTypes: Article; PubTypes: C...
EBSCO Export LongDbName: Canadian Reference Centre ShortDbName: rch AN: 178237798 Title: A Rapid Investigation of Artificial Intelligence Generated Content Footprints in Scholarly Publications. PublicationDate: 20240701 Contributors: Tang, Gengyan; Eaton, Sarah Elaine; DocTypes: Article; PubTypes: CoverDate: Jul2024 PeerReviewed: true Source: Journal of Scholarly Publishing IsiType: JOUR DOIDS: ; ISBNS: ; ISSNS: 1198-9742; PublisherLocations: ; RecordType: ARTICLES BookEdition: Publisher: University of Toronto Press PageStart: 337 PageEnd: 355 PageCount: 19 Volume: 55 Issue: 3 Abstract: This study reports on a novel phenomenon observed in scholarly publications. Some research articles unrelated to the field of artificial intelligence (AI)–generated content (AIGC) contain phrases such as 'As an AI language model...' The authors conceptualize this phenomenon as 'AIGC footprints.' To provide early evidence, they conducted a small-scale sample investigation by collecting twenty- five articles. These articles were published by authors from countries in Central Asia, South Asia, and Africa. Among these authors, there were assistant professors, doctoral and master's students. Single authors and single affiliations were more common. Analysis of the article content revealed that some authors utilized ChatGPT for literature reviews or idea generation. The twenty-five articles with AIGC footprints were published in eighteen different academic journals. The emergence of AIGC footprints reflects the potential challenges faced by scholarly publishing and higher education. The authors also provide several recommendations. DOI: 10.3138/jsp-2023-0079 Language: eng Subjects: SOUTH Asia; CENTRAL Asia; ARTIFICIAL intelligence; LANGUAGE models; CHATGPT; SCHOLARLY publishing; SCHOLARLY periodicals; plink: https://research.ebsco.com/linkprocessor/plink?id=f292021d-fc8e-3de0-9fc1- b64c0f1ef8fb