Okay so there's this new book, "The Scientist's Guide to Writing" third edition, and apparently it has a chapter about "AI writing tools" . It covers the "benefits and pitfalls of using LLMs" and the "legal, ethical, and professional implications scientists need to consider before working with them" .
Which is great and all, but I need answers NOW, not after I buy a textbook.
My professor said we can use AI for brainstorming but not for actual writing. Another professor said any AI use is cheating. Which one is it?
The book apparently also covers "preprinting and predatory journals, humor and cultural references in titles, graphical abstracts, and managing very large coauthorship teams" . That's a lot.
Has anyone actually read this? Is it worth buying or can I just find the AI chapter somewhere?
Which is great and all, but I need answers NOW, not after I buy a textbook.
My professor said we can use AI for brainstorming but not for actual writing. Another professor said any AI use is cheating. Which one is it?
The book apparently also covers "preprinting and predatory journals, humor and cultural references in titles, graphical abstracts, and managing very large coauthorship teams" . That's a lot.
Has anyone actually read this? Is it worth buying or can I just find the AI chapter somewhere?