AIMC Topic: Authorship

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Defining the Boundaries of AI Use in Scientific Writing: A Comparative Review of Editorial Policies.

Journal of Korean medical science
The rapid rise of generative artificial intelligence (AI) is fundamentally transforming the landscape of medical writing and publishing. In response, major academic organizations and high-impact journals have released guidelines addressing core ethic...

Battle of the authors: Comparing neurosurgery articles written by humans and AI.

Journal of clinical neuroscience : official journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia
BACKGROUND: The advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) has led to its application in various fields, including medical literature. This study compares the quality of neurosurgery articles written by human authors and those generated by ChatGPT, ...

Use of Artificial Intelligence in Manuscript Preparation: AI as a Coauthor.

The International journal of periodontics & restorative dentistry
The use of artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly expanding. While it comes with some drawbacks, it also offers numerous advantages. One significant application of AI is chatbots, which utilize natural language processing and machine learning to pro...

A publishing infrastructure for Artificial Intelligence (AI)-assisted academic authoring.

Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA
OBJECTIVE: Investigate the use of advanced natural language processing models to streamline the time-consuming process of writing and revising scholarly manuscripts.

What predicts citation counts and translational impact in headache research? A machine learning analysis.

Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache
BACKGROUND: We aimed to develop the first machine learning models to predict citation counts and the translational impact, defined as inclusion in guidelines or policy documents, of headache research, and assess which factors are most predictive.

Human versus artificial intelligence-generated arthroplasty literature: A single-blinded analysis of perceived communication, quality, and authorship source.

The international journal of medical robotics + computer assisted surgery : MRCAS
BACKGROUND: Large language models (LLM) have unknown implications for medical research. This study assessed whether LLM-generated abstracts are distinguishable from human-written abstracts and to compare their perceived quality.