health
Fraudulent citations, blamed on AI hallucinations, are becoming more common in research papers
Why this matters: health reporting relevant to everyday decisions and well-being.
Citations in academic papers are intended to ground research in the work that preceded it, over time creating something of a family tree explaining the roots of ideas, protocols, and studies.&#x A0; But a growing number of these citations lead to dead ends. “Fabricated” citations that do not reference real papers are spreading in the literature, polluting the public record of science, a new study published Thursday in the Lancet shows. Tools using generative AI are likely to blame, say the Columbia University researchers who authored the paper.Read the rest…
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