Researchers employing artificial intelligence are producing three times more academic papers and securing five times the number of citations compared to their peers without AI assistance, a recent analysis shows. However, the study cautions that these AI-driven advancements may also limit broader scientific inquiry and engagement.
Conducted by the University of Chicago and Tsinghua University, the findings suggest that AI adoption among scientists may lead to a convergence on existing solutions, inadvertently narrowing scientific scope. Despite bolstering research efficiency, AI augments research focus but discourages exploration of novel topics.
Published in the journal Nature, the analysis examined over 41 million research papers and concluded that AI usage reduces studied topics by nearly 5% and lowers scientific exchanges by 22%. The authors advocate for policy changes and AI tools that promote data collection and exploration beyond optimization.
