'Imagine my surprise when I received reviews on a submitted paper declaring that it was the work of ChatGPT. One reviewer wrote that it was “obviously ChatGPT”, and the handling editor vaguely agreed, saying that they found “the writing style unusual”. Surprise was just one emotion I experienced; I also felt shock, dismay and a flood of confusion and alarm. Given how much work I put into writing, it was a blow to be accused of being a chatbot — especially without any evidence.'
Wow. I disagree with the decision by journals that authors can't use ChatGPT to help convey their scientific discoveries more clearly.
I don't understand how it's any different than hiring an editor--something many journals recommend to authors of poorly written articles. Sure ChatGPT might make something up, but a scientific editor can similarly misunderstand the original draft and write something nonsensical.
Either way, it's up to the author to validate the product.
@MCDuncanLab @cyrilpedia we don’t allow plagiarism as a strategy to help convey our scientific discoveries more clearly. To me ChatGPT is much more similar to plagiarism than to hiring an editor—conflating the two ignores the fundamentally extractive and exploitative nature of how ChatGPT was built. Plus there is a real risk of plagiarizing with ChatGPT! Of course ChatGPT makes stuff up as you note, but it can also just spit out training data, aka other people’s words.
I am more concerned about the rampant plagiarism of ideas and ignoring prior work in the field than some struggling author who describes their novel findings using words first assembled by another author.
The former does actually hurt the victim.
I fail to see the hurt of reusing phrases such as 'Macroautophagy, hereafter referred to as autophagy'
It's just that it's easier to prove using words without attributing sources than proving someone stole an idea.
@MCDuncanLab @cyrilpedia and as a human being I hate the thought of the “ChatGPTification” of our writing and communication styles. ChatGPT is wordy, bland, and lacking insight. It may be fine for mimicking corporate-speak in mundane emails, but I don’t want that anywhere near the creative and scholarly process of academic writing.