探花视频

Robot-written reviews fool academics

Peer reviews created by self-generated text machines are the latest threat to scientific integrity

Published on
September 20, 2016
Last updated
February 16, 2017
Attacked by robot
Source: Rex
The machine age: although computer-generated reviews 鈥榗annot possibly deceive any rigorous editorial procedure鈥, they could 鈥榝ind a role in questionable scenarios and magnify the scale of scholarly frauds鈥, the paper finds

Soulless computer algorithms are already churning out weather bulletins, sports reports, rap lyrics and even passable Chinese poetry.

But it seems machines have now taken another step towards replacing human enterprise by generating their own reviews of serious academic journal papers that are able to impress even experienced academics.

Using automatic text generation software, computer scientists at Italy鈥檚 University of Trieste created a series of fake peer reviews of genuine journal papers and asked academics of different levels of seniority to say whether they agreed with their recommendations to accept for publication or not.

In a quarter of cases, academics said they agreed with the fake review鈥檚 conclusions, even though they were entirely made up of computer-generated gobbledegook 鈥 or, rather, sentences picked at random from a selection of peer reviews taken from subjects as diverse as brain science, ecology and ornithology.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

鈥淪entences like 鈥榠t would be good if you can also talk about the importance of establishing some good shared benchmarks鈥 or 鈥榠t would be useful to identify key assumptions in the modelling' are probably well suited to almost any review,鈥 explained Eric Medvet, assistant professor at Trieste鈥檚 department of engineering and architecture, who conducted the experiment with colleagues at his university鈥檚 .

鈥淚f, by chance, a generated review combines sentences which are not too specific, but credible, the review itself may appear as written by a real, human reviewer even to the eyes of an experienced reader,鈥 added Dr Medvet, whose , "Your Paper has been Accepted, Rejected, or Whatever: Automatic Generation of Scientific Paper Reviews", was published in the journal Lecture Notes in Computer Science last month.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Mixing the fake reviews with real reviews was also likely to distort decisions made by academics by making weak papers appear far stronger thanks to a series of glowing reviews, the paper found.

The research team was able to influence the peer review process in one in four cases by throwing fake reviews into the mix, it said.

鈥淭his [may be] the situation [faced by a] real conference programme chair鈥ho has to take decisions about all the submissions at his or her conference,鈥 Dr Medvet told 探花视频.

鈥淗e or she could decide [who to accept] without actually reading all the reviews, or maybe by giving them just a shallow read,鈥 he added.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

While computer-generated reviews 鈥渃annot possibly deceive any rigorous editorial procedure, [they] could nevertheless find a role in several questionable scenarios and magnify the scale of scholarly frauds鈥, the paper concludes.

With nearly 1,000 so-called "predatory publishers" seeking pay-to-publish journal papers, automatically generated reviews may make it easier for bogus papers to gain credibility, he added.

鈥淚t is quite easy to spot the fact that [these reviews] are not sound, but not if you do not read them,鈥 said Dr Medvet.

jack.grove@tesglobal.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Related universities

Reader's comments (1)

What about the human-generated gobbledegook with which we are already familiar? Or is that just designed to deceive computers into believing we've said something?

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT