MIT says that as a consequence of issues concerning the “integrity” of a high-profile paper on the results of synthetic intelligence on the productiveness of a supplies science lab, the paper must be “withdrawn from public discourse.”
The paper in query, “Synthetic Intelligence, Scientific Discovery, and Product Innovation,” was written by a doctoral pupil within the college’s economics program. It claimed to indicate that the introduction of an AI instrument right into a large-but-unidentified supplies science lab led to the invention of extra supplies and extra patent filings, however at the price of decreasing researchers’ satisfaction with their work.
MIT economists Daron Acemoglu (who just lately gained the Nobel Prize) and David Autor each praised the paper final 12 months, with Autor telling the Wall Road Journal he was “floored.” In a press release included in MIT’s announcement on Friday, Acemoglu and Autor described the paper as “already identified and mentioned extensively within the literature on AI and science, although it has not been revealed in any refereed journal.”
Nonetheless, the 2 economists mentioned they now have “no confidence within the provenance, reliability or validity of the information and within the veracity of the analysis.”
In response to the WSJ, a pc scientist with expertise in supplies science approached Acemoglu and Autor with issues in January. They introduced these issues to MIT, resulting in an inside assessment.
MIT says that as a consequence of pupil privateness legal guidelines, it can not disclose the outcomes of that assessment, however the paper’s creator is “now not at MIT.” And whereas the college’s announcement doesn’t title the scholar, each a preprint model of the paper and the preliminary press protection establish the creator as Aidan Toner-Rodgers. (TechCrunch has reached out to Toner-Rodgers for remark.)
MIT additionally says it has requested the paper be withdrawn from The Quarterly Journal of Economics, the place it was submitted for publication, and from the preprint web site arXiv. Apparently solely a paper’s authors are in a position to submit arXiv withdrawal requests, however MIT says “up to now, the creator has not accomplished so.”
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