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AI and Generative AI for Research Discovery and Summarization

Mark Glickman, Yi Zhang

TL;DR

The developments in AI and generative AI for research discovery and summarization are reviewed, and directions where these types of tools are likely to head in the future are proposed that may be of interest to statistician and data scientists.

Abstract

AI and generative AI tools, including chatbots like ChatGPT that rely on large language models (LLMs), have burst onto the scene this year, creating incredible opportunities to increase work productivity and improve our lives. Statisticians and data scientists have begun experiencing the benefits from the availability of these tools in numerous ways, such as the generation of programming code from text prompts to analyze data or fit statistical models. One area that these tools can make a substantial impact is in research discovery and summarization. Standalone tools and plugins to chatbots are being developed that allow researchers to more quickly find relevant literature than pre-2023 search tools. Furthermore, generative AI tools have improved to the point where they can summarize and extract the key points from research articles in succinct language. Finally, chatbots based on highly parameterized LLMs can be used to simulate abductive reasoning, which provides researchers the ability to make connections among related technical topics, which can also be used for research discovery. We review the developments in AI and generative AI for research discovery and summarization, and propose directions where these types of tools are likely to head in the future that may be of interest to statistician and data scientists.

AI and Generative AI for Research Discovery and Summarization

TL;DR

The developments in AI and generative AI for research discovery and summarization are reviewed, and directions where these types of tools are likely to head in the future are proposed that may be of interest to statistician and data scientists.

Abstract

AI and generative AI tools, including chatbots like ChatGPT that rely on large language models (LLMs), have burst onto the scene this year, creating incredible opportunities to increase work productivity and improve our lives. Statisticians and data scientists have begun experiencing the benefits from the availability of these tools in numerous ways, such as the generation of programming code from text prompts to analyze data or fit statistical models. One area that these tools can make a substantial impact is in research discovery and summarization. Standalone tools and plugins to chatbots are being developed that allow researchers to more quickly find relevant literature than pre-2023 search tools. Furthermore, generative AI tools have improved to the point where they can summarize and extract the key points from research articles in succinct language. Finally, chatbots based on highly parameterized LLMs can be used to simulate abductive reasoning, which provides researchers the ability to make connections among related technical topics, which can also be used for research discovery. We review the developments in AI and generative AI for research discovery and summarization, and propose directions where these types of tools are likely to head in the future that may be of interest to statistician and data scientists.
Paper Structure (9 sections, 9 figures)

This paper contains 9 sections, 9 figures.

Figures (9)

  • Figure 1: Google search results based on the keywords "generating Euclidean vectors from a pairwise distance matrix."
  • Figure 2: Response of ChatGPT to the prompt "provide citations for five papers on multidimensional scaling from the last ten years."
  • Figure 3: Results of query to Elicit.
  • Figure 4: Information provided by Elicit on selected article.
  • Figure 5: Results of search in Litmaps based on keywords.
  • ...and 4 more figures