The word ‘delve’ has taken off in medical research papers, but the Aussie academic behind the finding says using AI is nothing to be ashamed of.
In 2023, medical researchers developed a new obsession: they started using the word “delve” at four times the rate they had in 2022. PubMed, a biomedical research database, showed it appeared in papers more than 2500 times that year, which was the first that ChatGPT was widely in use.
Nguyen readily admits that there isn’t a “smoking gun” to show that the word is preferred by AI tools. And he thinks his work has been misinterpreted by people who took it so literally as to mean that any given piece of writing with “delve” was suspect.But that’s a consequence of “building in public” – a technology term for making the work behind new products transparent as it goes along – which Nguyen has adopted for academia.
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Why is ChatGPT trying to gaslight me?AI chatbots may be sophisticated and slick, but they’re far from being a source of reliable information.
Read more »
Why is ChatGPT trying to gaslight me?AI chatbots may be sophisticated and slick, but they’re far from being a source of reliable information.
Read more »
Why is ChatGPT trying to gaslight me?AI chatbots may be sophisticated and slick, but they’re far from being a source of reliable information.
Read more »
Why you shouldn’t ask ChatGPT for medical adviceThe more information you give a GP, the more likely you are to get a diagnosis. Not so for ChatGPT.
Read more »
Why you shouldn’t ask ChatGPT for medical adviceThe more information you give a GP, the more likely you are to get a diagnosis. Not so for ChatGPT.
Read more »
‘Bad girl’: Internet loses it over X-rated AI botGen Z is “falling for” ChatGPT’s dark alter ego DAN.
Read more »