• dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m using ChatGPT to help me simplify the very terse language of an academic paper, and I must say I’m super unimpressed so far. I don’t understand how people could possibly use it to write anything of substance given the output it generates; it generates redundant, overlapping, and superficial responses that need to be heavily edited to make sense. I’m pretty much better off trying to decipher the paper by myself.

    • hydroptic@sopuli.xyz
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      2 months ago

      I’m not a native English speaker and I occasionally use GPT to basically do some light editing when writing longer English texts, so brushing up grammar etc., but I’ve always vetted the results and often changed them a bit so they sound more like “me” if that makes any sense. GPT’s also been very handy with doing quick’n’dirty translations from Finnish to English (which eg. Google Translate is notoriously bad at), but I always make sure the result isn’t complete dada, and I only do that in pretty trivial cases like if I want to quote a piece of some Finnish article but in an English-speaking Lemmy community.

      Like you I’ve tried using GPT to summarize academic texts but I’ve also not been too impressed with the results, but it’s been a while. While there’s a lot of unwarranted hype around LLMs, I’ve definitely found them useful for a bunch of different tasks, but I understand their limitations so I rarely eg. try to get factual information out of them (at least without very thorough verification)

    • canihasaccount@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      It can’t write much of substance. The only people using it in science for anything more than fluff are people who don’t speak English well or who have no business writing papers. I sympathize with the former, but I don’t understand why those folks wouldn’t just either publish in a language they speak or get an English-speaking coauthor to help write in English. I wouldn’t ever use it to write an article. Even editing, it tends to butcher scientific nuance.

      It is good at writing fluff though, which is helpful for things like letters of recommendation for undergraduates.

      • hydroptic@sopuli.xyz
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        2 months ago

        I don’t understand why those folks wouldn’t just either publish in a language they speak or get an English-speaking coauthor to help write in English

        Major journals are in English, and “just getting an English speaking coauthor” might not be as easy as you make it sound – especially considering that using an LLM to fix grammar is definitely going to be easier and faster

        • canihasaccount@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          I’m in science. It isn’t difficult to get an English speaking coauthor. Going to an LLM is easier and faster, sure, but if someone can’t understand the output then they have no idea if their text is being translated correctly.

          • hydroptic@sopuli.xyz
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            2 months ago

            Oh yeah that’s absolutely true, I was thinking more of people who aren’t fluent in English and would like to make their text a bit more natural or fluent, which is what I’ve done

            • canihasaccount@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Ah, I would consider that fluff, which is okay in my book. I don’t use it for writing, personally, but what I tell my students is that if it’d be fine for a friend to do the thing and not get coauthorship, it’s fine to use AI for that (provided you acknowledge it, as you would a friend who provides some helpful comments on a draft). Proofing and suggesting minor stylistic things fall under that umbrella IMO.

    • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      LLMs can only copy information, they don’t evaluate it. So they end up with a quality level around the median of the input. And since most content is pretty crappy, you end up with mediocre crappy output.

      Thankfully, there’s very high demand for mediocre crap (which is why there’s so much of it).