Litcius/Paper detail

Automating the practice of science: Opportunities, challenges, and implications

Sebastian Musslick, Laura Bartlett, Suyog Chandramouli, Marina Dubova, Fernand Gobet, Thomas L. Griffiths, Jessica Hullman, Ross D. King, J. Nathan Kutz, Christopher G. Lucas, Suhas Mahesh, Franco Pestilli, Sabina J. Sloman, William R. Holmes

2025Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Automation transformed various aspects of our human civilization, revolutionizing industries and streamlining processes. In the domain of scientific inquiry, automated approaches emerged as powerful tools, holding promise for accelerating discovery, enhancing reproducibility, and overcoming the traditional impediments to scientific progress. This article evaluates the scope of automation within scientific practice and assesses recent approaches. Furthermore, it discusses different perspectives to the following questions: where do the greatest opportunities lie for automation in scientific practice?; What are the current bottlenecks of automating scientific practice?; and What are significant ethical and practical consequences of automating scientific practice? By discussing the motivations behind automated science, analyzing the hurdles encountered, and examining its implications, this article invites researchers, policymakers, and stakeholders to navigate the rapidly evolving frontier of automated scientific practice.

Topics & Concepts

AutomationScope (computer science)Engineering ethicsFrontierDomain (mathematical analysis)Data scienceBest practiceComputer scienceKnowledge managementManagement scienceEngineeringPolitical scienceMathematicsLawMathematical analysisProgramming languageMechanical engineeringMachine Learning in Materials ScienceExplainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI)Scientific Computing and Data Management