Litcius/Paper detail

Is AI my co-author? The ethics of using artificial intelligence in scientific publishing

Barton Moffatt, Alicia Hall

2024Accountability in Research28 citationsDOI

Abstract

The recent emergence of Large Language Models (LLMs) and other forms of Artificial Intelligence (AI) has led people to wonder whether they could act as an author on a scientific paper. This paper argues that AI systems should not be included on the author by-line. We agree with current commentators that LLMs are incapable of taking responsibility for their work and thus do not meet current authorship guidelines. We identify other problems with responsibility and authorship. In addition, the problems go deeper as AI tools also do not write in a meaningful sense nor do they have persistent identities. From a broader publication ethics perspective, adopting AI authorship would have detrimental effects on an already overly competitive and stressed publishing ecosystem. Deterrence is possible as backward-looking tools will likely be able to identify past AI usage. Finally, we question the value of using AI to produce more research simply for publication's sake.

Topics & Concepts

WonderPublishingPerspective (graphical)Value (mathematics)SociologyEngineering ethicsEpistemologyComputer sciencePolitical scienceLawArtificial intelligencePhilosophyEngineeringMachine learningArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationEthics and Social Impacts of AIExplainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI)