A US software company claims to have created the program that researchers鈥 dreams (or nightmares) are made of: an automated assistant able to write up papers so that you don鈥檛 have to.
鈥淢anuscript Writer鈥, newly released by sciNote, can save researchers time, and the tedium of pulling together their methodology and findings, by using artificial intelligence to draft papers,聽according to its creators.
鈥淒o you ever get that feeling that you would like to have a magic spell to organise all your data,鈥 a press release from the company reads, 鈥渁nd once it is organised, wouldn鈥檛 it be magnificent if there would be a software that could put together all relevant data from your projects, add some new references and present you with a manuscript draft you can build upon?鈥
An add-on to the company鈥檚 pre-existing Electronic Lab Notebook (ELN) program, Manuscript Writer works 鈥渂y drawing upon data contained within the ELN and references that are accessible in open access journals鈥.
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The outcome is an initial draft that the writer can 鈥渂uild upon鈥, although the discussion part of a research paper would be left up to the academic, since it is the 鈥渕ost creative and original part鈥, the company adds.
Sceptics have suggested the program may be too good to be true, since automated content could run the risk of plagiarism more than the trained human eye. Charles Seife, a faculty member at New York University鈥檚 Division of Medical Ethics, told the聽聽blog that the program sounded 鈥減roblematic鈥.
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鈥淭he terms of service say explicitly that the draft will be generated not just from the data stored by the user but from 鈥榬elevant keywords and open access references鈥,鈥 he said. 鈥淥bviously, an AI isn鈥檛 capable of understanding and digesting prose the way a human is, so it鈥檚 hard for me to see how it鈥檚 going to be able to create any sort of derivative work based on open-access references that isn鈥檛 plagiaristic or incoherent (or most likely both).鈥
Daniele Fanelli, a fellow in quantitative methodology at the London School of Economics, said the industry would 鈥渦ndoubtedly鈥 be seeing more AI tools such as Manuscript Writer in the coming years.
鈥淭his is where science is heading, together with all other creative human activities,鈥 he told THE. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see any a priori ethical concerns with the use of such a tool, as long as researchers declare transparently that they used it.
鈥淲ith regards to plagiarism or data fabrication, it might actually help both detection and prevention,鈥 Dr Fanelli added. 鈥淗owever, downsides and abuses are not difficult to imagine, starting with the fact that it might reduce the incentive for young researchers to learn how to write and even to think deeply about a scientific problem.鈥
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