top of page

Hallucinated Citations in the Age of AI

Updated: Apr 22


How to properly fix your citations after it was altered by AI.

By: Kritika Goel


A disturbing trend has been observed with research publications, hallucinated citations, and AI have a big hand in it. The use of large language models by researchers to conduct literature searches or format bibliographies is a common practice, but this is leading to the generation of non-existent academic references. Citation errors in publications are not uncommon; they may involve an incorrectly spelled author name or an incorrect year of publication, but the difference between inaccuracy and fraud is huge.


In order to maintain the veracity of the publication, tools provided by companies like

Grounded AI, as well as manual checks, would be the way going forward. This might be time-consuming, and there will be room for human errors in the process of manual checking, but the problem of fake references can be tackled.


In reference to the research carried out by Improve Life PLLC, iterations of checking would be imperative. From a recent perspective, we have to recognize that there would be human errors as well as machine errors, and those can often overlap. The image below from nature.com is a good reference point to avoid hallucinated citations. It is to be taken into account as well that receiving 100% accuracy would be challenging; the below-mentioned methodology is a step in the right direction.


Sources:



2 Comments


Great post! As if human error weren't bad enough, now we need to factor in fake information from AI to muddy research.

Like

This is a great and very relevant topic to discuss, I'm glas more people will be able to learn about this through this post! Thank you!

Like
bottom of page