How An MIT Student Awed Top Economists With His AI Study - Until It All Fell Apart (msn.com)
- Reference: 0180190157
- News link: https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/11/24/0429245/how-an-mit-student-awed-top-economists-with-his-ai-study---until-it-all-fell-apart
- Source link: https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/careersandeducation/an-mit-student-awed-top-economists-with-his-ai-study-then-it-all-fell-apart/ar-AA1QV7Rk
But within weeks his academic mentors "were asking an unthinkable question," [2]reports the Wall Street Journal . Had Toner-Rodgers made it all up?
> Toner-Rodgers's illusory success seems in part thanks to the dynamics he has now upset: an academic culture at MIT where high levels of trust, integrity and rigor are all — for better or worse — assumed. He focused on AI, a field where peer-reviewed research is still in its infancy and the hunger for data is insatiable. What has stunned his former colleagues and mentors is the sheer breadth of his apparent deception. He didn't just tweak a few variables. It appears he invented the entire study. In the aftermath, MIT economics professors have been discussing ways to raise standards for graduate students' research papers, including scrutinizing raw data, and students are going out of their way to show their work isn't counterfeit, according to people at the school.
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> Since parting with the university, Toner-Rodgers has told other students that his paper's problems were essentially a mere issue with data rights. According to him, he had indeed burrowed into a trove of data from a large materials-science company, as his paper said he did. But instead of getting formal permission to use the data, he faked a data-use agreement after the company wanted to pull out, he told other students via a WhatsApp message in May... On Jan. 31, Corning filed a complaint with the World Intellectual Property Organization against the registrar of the domain name corningresearch.com. Someone who controlled that domain name could potentially create email addresses or webpages that gave the impression they were affiliated with the company. WIPO soon found that Toner-Rodgers had apparently registered the domain name, according to the organization's written decision on the case. Toner-Rodgers never responded to the complaint, and Corning successfully won the transfer of the domain name. WIPO declined to comment...
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> In the WhatsApp chat in May, in which Toner-Rodgers told other students he had faked the data-use agreement, he wrote, "This was a huge and embarrassing act of dishonesty on my part, and in hindsight it clearly would've been better to just abandon the paper." Both Corning and 3M told the Journal that they didn't roll out the experiment Toner-Rodgers described, and that they didn't share data with him.
[1] https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/05/16/213210/mit-asks-arxiv-to-take-down-preprint-paper-on-ai-and-scientific-discovery
[2] https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/careersandeducation/an-mit-student-awed-top-economists-with-his-ai-study-then-it-all-fell-apart/ar-AA1QV7Rk
maybe AI helped shape the study (Score:2)
It is possible that Aidan Toner-Rodgers's paper bore the hallmarks of AI-assisted writing. The polished structure, fluent transitions, and journal-ready formatting seemed unusually advanced for a first-year PhD student, especially given the speed with which the work was produced. Large language models are adept at generating academic-style prose, weaving bold claims into coherent narratives, and mimicking the authoritative tone expected in economics journals. If AI tools were used, they may have helped tran
Banned. (Score:2)
This should be a career-ending move. Demonstrating this level of dishonesty should bar him from holding a graduate degree of any kind, really, let alone anything in scientific research.
Increasing and enforcing standards is needed, but also higher standards mean nothing if there are no consequences. Make it clear that this kind of nonsense will obliterate your academic career.
=Smidge=
Re: (Score:2)
Yes. That should get this person barred for life from any research position. Had that gone on for longer, it would have done significant damage.
And more AI nonsense gets exposed (Score:2)
Lets face it: LLMs are somewhat better search, can summarize non-complex texts and can do simple, well-known work with not very good reliability. But that really is it. And that in no way justifies the hype.
"Toner-Rodgers" (Score:1)
It even sounds like a name AI would make up. How do we know this guy even exists at all?