Search
Items tagged with: ChatGPT
Is #ChatGPT corrupting peer review? Telltale words hint at #AI use
Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01051-2
Out of more than 1,600 scientists who responded to a 2023 Nature survey, nearly 30% said they had used generative AI to write papers and around 15% said they had used it for their own literature reviews and to write grant applications.
#technology #science #news #future
Is ChatGPT corrupting peer review? Telltale words hint at AI use
A study of review reports identifies dozens of adjectives that could indicate text written with the help of chatbots.Singh Chawla, Dalmeet
“AI” as currently hyped is giant billion dollar companies blatantly stealing content, disregarding licenses, deceiving about capabilities, and burning the planet in the process.
It is the largest theft of intellectual property in the history of humankind, and these companies are knowingly and willing ignoring the licenses, terms of service, and laws that us lowly individuals are beholden to.
#AI #GenAI #LLM #LLMs #OpenAI #ChatGPT #GPT #GPT4 #Sora #Gemini
#AI #VoiceGeneration #DeepFakes
via #TheVerge
"#OpenAI’s voice cloning AI model only needs a 15-second sample to work
/
Called Voice Generation, the model has been in development since late 2022 and powers the Read Aloud feature in #ChatGPT."
"# The AI-generated voice can read out text prompts on command in the same language as the speaker or in a number of other languages.👈"
"OpenAI told the publication the model will only be available to about 10 developers."
https://www.theverge.com/2024/3/29/24115701/openai-voice-generation-ai-model
OpenAI’s voice cloning AI model only needs a 15-second sample to work
OpenAI has revealed its Voice Generation model, which can generate new audio using someone’s voice based on just a short clip.Emilia David (The Verge)
I have a preprint out estimating how many scholarly papers are written using chatGPT etc? I estimate upwards of 60k articles (>1% of global output) published in 2023. https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.16887
How can we identify this? Simple: there are certain words that LLMs love, and they suddenly start showing up *a lot* last year. Twice as many papers call something "intricate", big rises for "commendable" and "meticulous".
#bibliometrics #scholcomm #chatgpt
ChatGPT "contamination": estimating the prevalence of LLMs in the scholarly literature
The use of ChatGPT and similar Large Language Model (LLM) tools in scholarly communication and academic publishing has been widely discussed since they became easily accessible to a general audience in late 2022.arXiv.org