Hosseini Mohammad, Gordijn Bert, Kaebnick Gregory E, Holmes Kristi
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Galter Health Sciences Library and Learning Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Res Ethics. 2025 Jun 21. doi: 10.1177/17470161251345499.
Researchers have been using generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) to support writing manuscripts for several years now. However, as GenAI evolves and scientists are using it more frequently, the case for mandatory disclosure of GenAI for writing assistance continues to diverge from the initial justifications for disclosure, namely (1) preventing researchers from taking credit for work done by machines; (2) enabling other researchers to critically evaluate a manuscript and its specific claims; and (3) helping editors determine if a submission satisfies their editorial policies. Our initial position (communicated through previous publications) regarding GenAI use for writing assistance was in favor of mandatory disclosure. Nevertheless, as we show in this paper, we have changed our position and now support instituting a voluntary disclosure policy because currently (1) the credit due to machines for assisting researchers is moving below the threshold of requiring recognition; (2) it is impractical (if not impossible) to accurately specify what parts of the text are human-/GenAI-generated; and (3) disclosures could increase biases against non-native speakers of the English language and compromise the integrity of the peer review system. Consequently, we argue, it should be up to the authors of manuscripts to disclose their use of GenAI for writing assistance. For example, in disciplines where writing is the hallmark of originality, or when authors believe disclosure is beneficial, a voluntary checkbox in manuscript submission systems, visible only after publication (rather than a free-text note in the manuscripts) would be preferable.
多年来,研究人员一直在使用生成式人工智能(GenAI)来辅助撰写论文手稿。然而,随着GenAI的不断发展,科学家们对其使用频率也越来越高,关于强制披露使用GenAI进行写作辅助的情况,与最初支持披露的理由相比,已出现分歧,这些理由包括:(1)防止研究人员将机器完成的工作据为己有;(2)使其他研究人员能够批判性地评估一篇论文及其具体主张;(3)帮助编辑确定一篇投稿是否符合他们的编辑政策。我们最初(通过之前的出版物表达)对于使用GenAI进行写作辅助的立场是支持强制披露。然而,正如我们在本文中所表明的,我们已经改变了立场,现在支持制定一项自愿披露政策,因为目前:(1)机器在协助研究人员方面所应得的功劳已低于需要认可的阈值;(2)准确指出文本中哪些部分是由人类/GenAI生成的是不切实际的(甚至是不可能的);(3)披露可能会增加对非英语母语者的偏见,并损害同行评审系统的公正性。因此,我们认为,应由论文作者自行披露他们使用GenAI进行写作辅助的情况。例如,在以写作为原创标志的学科中,或者当作者认为披露是有益的时候,稿件提交系统中一个仅在发表后可见的自愿勾选框(而不是稿件中的自由文本注释)会更可取。