- cross-posted to:
- news@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- news@beehaw.org
Appall and scorn ripped through scientists’ social media networks Thursday as several egregiously bad AI-generated figures circulated from a peer-reviewed article recently published in a reputable journal. Those figures—which the authors acknowledge in the article’s text were made by Midjourney—are all uninterpretable. They contain gibberish text and, most strikingly, one includes an image of a rat with grotesquely large and bizarre genitals, as well as a text label of “dck.”
A dck pck, if you will.
Count me among the “some scientists online” who “questioned whether the text was also AI-generated”. I mean, it’s a disjointed mess. Right off, we get this:
The term “stem cell” was first coined in 1901 by Regaud
Um, no. But if that could be taken for human error, what about a sentence like this:
They were physically sheared and digested with a solution of DnaseI, hyaluronidase, collagenase, and trypsin using a two-step enzymatic digestion method in which the digestive enzymes included DnaseI, hyaluronidase, collagenase, and trypsin.
Just a bit before that, the text does a swerve into what sounds like a specific experiment, which doesn’t fit with its surroundings and is very strange in a review article. My guess is the whole thing was made by stitching together LLM responses.
The publisher, Frontiers Media, is not exactly held in high regard overall.
To be fair though rodents can have pretty huge balls. Like dragging on the ground behind them huge.
so can our brave soldiers. god bless
have you seen the photo because we’re talking so big that the rat can’t reach its little feet to the ground huge
I’m not sure the “frontiers in” journals are all that reputable.
My informal impression is that they range from “OK” to “… the Hell?!”.
Here’s the pic in its full glory.
Tag yourself, I’m Testtomcels
bond voice I’m retat. rat retat.
I go by many names, but you may call me Iollotte.
di>locttal stem ells was my father’s name. please, call me dck
like fuck can you imagine looking at nothing but results like these and believing “yep these are the glimmerings of AGI, what a revolutionary technology”
This one from the same is also funny
all leftists care about is propronounization stat protemns, translocation, and posting on DMmer
Jak stats and prom, what a night.
Reminds me of the plastic placemats I ate off of as a toddler.
this will be in a future gallery exhibition about the beginning of the Art Cynique movement
Frontiers Media is the second entry of the “don’t cite this BS” list for Wikipedia.
New ppb for Hexbear users?
According to researchers referenced in a 2015 blog post quoted by Allison and James Kaufman in the 2018 book Pseudoscience: The Conspiracy Against Science, “Frontiers has used an in-house journals management software that does not give reviewers the option to recommend the rejection of manuscripts” and the “system is setup to make it almost impossible to reject papers”. source
Ah yes, pear reviw.
Recommend publication?
>yes
later
A dck pck, if you will.
I am so glad it wasn’t just my brain that went there
I read an article about this on mastodon earlier, but somehow it seems like it took a long time for anyone to read the text of the paper and realize that’s garbage too
Funny, when I ask chatgpt to draw a rationalist, the same thing pops up.
When my partner texted me the rat picture without any context about an hour ago, “aghast” doesn’t begin to cover my reaction.
“Aghast”? No, more like two or three ghast, at least
Easily a lich or two and a few ghouls as well. Possibly an entire nest of mohrg.
I’m fairly sure those are the constituent parts of the rat dick as labeled by the AI, yes
So bighast, perhaps even polyghast?
And it’s been retracted:
Following publication, concerns were raised regarding the nature of its AI-generated figures. The article does not meet the standards of editorial and scientific rigor for Frontiers in Cell and Development Biology; therefore, the article has been retracted.
This retraction was approved by the Chief Executive Editor of Frontiers. Frontiers would like to thank the concerned readers who contacted us regarding the published article.
At least they didn’t claim to have “high standards”, only “standards”!
That wording is a work of art