AI: The Key to Academic Fame and Fortune

October 17, 2024

dino orange_thumb_thumb_thumb_thumb_thumb_thumb_thumbJust a humanoid processing information related to online services and information access.

Why would professors use smart software to “help” them with their scholarly papers? The question may have been answered in the Phys.org article “Analysis of Approximately 75 Million Publications Finds Those Employing AI Are More Likely to Be a ‘Hit Paper’” reports:

A new Northwestern University study analyzing 74.6 million publications, 7.1 million patents and 4.2 million university course syllabi finds papers that employ AI exhibit a “citation impact premium.” However, the benefits of AI do not extend equitably to women and minority researchers, and, as AI plays more important roles in accelerating science, it may exacerbate existing disparities in science, with implications for building a diverse, equitable and inclusive research workforce.

Years ago some universities had an “honor code”? I think the University of Virginia was one of those dinosaurs. Today professors are using smart software to help them crank out academic hits.

The write up continues by quoting a couple of the study’s authors (presumably without using smart software) as saying:

“These advances raise the possibility that, as AI continues to improve in accuracy, robustness and reach, it may bring even more meaningful benefits to science, propelling scientific progress across a wide range of research areas while significantly augmenting researchers’ innovation capabilities…”

What are the payoffs for the professors who probably take a dim view of their own children using AI to make life easier, faster, and smoother? Let’s look at a handful my team and I discussed:

  1. More money in the form of pay raises
  2. Better shot at grants for research
  3. Fame at conferences
  4. Groupies. I know it is hard to imagine but it happens. A lot.
  5. Awards
  6. Better committee assignments
  7. Consulting work.

When one considers the benefits from babes to bucks, the chit chat about doing better research is of little interest to professors who see virtue in smart software.

The president of Stanford cheated. The head of the Harvard Ethics department appears to have done it. The professors in the study sample did it. The conclusion: Smart software use is normative behavior.

Stephen E Arnold, October 17, 2024

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