Journal forced to unpublish paper after authors are caught using ChatGPT to write it

Scientific Journal Retracts Paper Over AI Writing Revelation

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In a surprising turn of events, a scientific journal has withdrawn a paper it published just last month. The reason? It was uncovered that the authors had employed the assistance of an artificial intelligence application called ChatGPT in composing the article.

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The paper, initially printed on August 9th in the journal Physica Scripta, aimed to unravel new solutions to a complex mathematical equation. However, a curious reader noticed an unusual phrase, "Regenerate response," on the third page. This phrase happened to match the text found on a ChatGPT button—a discovery reported by Nature magazine.

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ChatGPT: The AI in Question

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Upon further scrutiny, the authors of the paper admitted to using ChatGPT in crafting their manuscript. Astonishingly, this fact had eluded detection during two months of peer review that followed the paper's submission in May. Consequently, the UK-based publisher chose to retract the paper, citing the authors' failure to disclose their utilization of the AI application.

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Kim Eggleton, responsible for peer review and research integrity at IOP publishing, expressed, "This is a breach of our ethical policies," as stated in Nature.

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A Detective in the World of Academic Integrity

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The revelation of this apparent copy-and-paste oversight can be attributed to computer scientist and integrity investigator Guillaume Cabanac. Since 2015, Cabanac has dedicated himself to uncovering papers that lack transparency regarding their use of AI.

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Cyril Labbé, a fellow computer scientist collaborating with Cabanac, remarked, "He gets frustrated about fake papers," as reported by Futurism.

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AI's Deceptive Infiltration

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Cabanac had previously uncovered a similar scenario in a paper published in Resources Policy, which contained "nonsensical equations," according to Futurism.

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Although the peer review process for publishing papers is designed to be meticulous, the sheer volume of research often results in some details escaping notice. David Bimler, another researcher on the hunt for fraudulent papers, pointed out that many reviewers lack the time to detect subtle indications of AI usage within a paper.

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"The entire science ecosystem is a 'publish or perish' situation," Bimler observed, as per Futurist. "The number of gatekeepers can't keep up."

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Physica Scripta had not responded to a request for comment from Fox News at the time of reporting.

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