The prestigiousĀ ScienceĀ family of journals is reversing its ban on the use of ChatGPT and will allow authors to include content written by artificial intelligence tools in submitted papers.
In a U-turn on what it calls its āā regarding the use of large language models in preparing text and figures, the publishing arm of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) says authors will be permitted to use āAI-assisted technologies as components of their research study or as aids in the writing or presentation of the manuscriptā as long as their useĀ is noted in both their cover letters and in the acknowledgements sections of any submitted papers.
āDetailed information should be provided in the methods section,ā it explains in updated guidelines published on 16 November, adding: āThe full prompt used in the production of the work, as well as the AI tool and its version, should be disclosed.
āAuthors are accountable for the accuracy of the work and for ensuring that there is no plagiarism,ā explain the new guidelines, which state that āeditors may decline to move forward with manuscripts if AI is used inappropriatelyā.
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Authors must also āensure that all sources are appropriately cited and should carefully review the work to guard against bias that may be introduced by AIā.
Continuing itsĀ existing policy on authorship, AI should not be listed as an author or co-author, nor should sources cited inĀ ScienceĀ journals be authored āin whole or in partā by AI tools, it says.
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The publishing group says it does not allow the use of AI by reviewersĀ because this ācould breach the confidentiality of the manuscriptā.Ā This follows reports that some submitted papers at other journals have been rejected for their failure to cite authors whomĀ it later emerged were created using generative AI technology.
āAI-generated images and other multimedia are not permitted in theĀ ScienceĀ journals without explicit permission from the editors,ā continue the guidelines, with exceptions only granted in ācertain situations ā eg for images and/or videos in manuscripts specifically about AI and/or machine learning. Such exceptions will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis and should be disclosed at the time of submission.
āT³ó±šĢżScienceĀ journals recognise that this area is rapidly developing, and our position on AI-generated multimedia may change with the evolution of copyright law and industry standards on ethical use.ā
In anĀ ,ĢżScienceās editor-in-chief, Holden Thorp, and its executive editor, Valda Vinson, say the āpolicy for theĀ ScienceĀ family of journals has been that the use of these tools in research is acceptable as long as proper disclosure appears in the methods section.
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āHowever, we initially took a very restrictive stance regarding the use of ChatGPT in preparing text and figures while monitoring thoughts and responses across the broad scientific community. As we said earlier this year, āwe believe it is prudent to wait until we have more clarity on what uses the scientific community will see as permissibleā,ā they continue.
They add that the new advice reflectsĀ changes in editorial policies byĀ several organisations, including the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE), theĀ World Association of Medical EditorsĀ and theĀ Council of Science Editors.
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