'ChatGPT detector' catches AI-generated papers with … – Nature.com

Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript.
Advertisement
You can also search for this author in PubMed  Google Scholar
You have full access to this article via your institution.

A new AI detection tool can accurately identify chemistry papers written by ChatGPT.Credit: Frank Rumpenhorst/dpa via Alamy
A machine-learning tool can easily spot when chemistry papers are written using the chatbot ChatGPT, according to a study published on 6 November in Cell Reports Physical Science1. The specialized classifier, which outperformed two existing artificial intelligence (AI) detectors, could help academic publishers to identify papers created by AI text generators.
“Most of the field of text analysis wants a really general detector that will work on anything,” says co-author Heather Desaire, a chemist at the University of Kansas in Lawrence. But by making a tool that focuses on a particular type of paper, “we were really going after accuracy”.
The findings suggest that efforts to develop AI detectors could be boosted by tailoring software to specific types of writing, Desaire says. “If you can build something quickly and easily, then it’s not that hard to build something for different domains.”
Desaire and her colleagues first described their ChatGPT detector in June, when they applied it to Perspective articles from the journal Science2. Using machine learning, the detector examines 20 features of writing style, including variation in sentence lengths, and the frequency of certain words and punctuation marks, to determine whether an academic scientist or ChatGPT wrote a piece of text. The findings show that “you could use a small set of features to get a high level of accuracy”, Desaire says.

How ChatGPT and other AI tools could disrupt scientific publishing
In the latest study, the detector was trained on the introductory sections of papers from ten chemistry journals published by the American Chemical Society (ACS). The team chose the introduction because this section of a paper is fairly easy for ChatGPT to write if it has access to background literature, Desaire says. The researchers trained their tool on 100 published introductions to serve as human-written text, and then asked ChatGPT-3.5 to write 200 introductions in ACS journal style. For 100 of these, the tool was provided with the papers’ titles, and for the other 100, it was given their abstracts.
When tested on introductions written by people and those generated by AI from the same journals, the tool identified ChatGPT-3.5-written sections based on titles with 100% accuracy. For the ChatGPT-generated introductions based on abstracts, the accuracy was slightly lower, at 98%. The tool worked just as well with text written by ChatGPT-4, the latest version of the chatbot. By contrast, the AI detector ZeroGPT identified AI-written introductions with an accuracy of only about 35–65%, depending on the version of ChatGPT used and whether the introduction had been generated from the title or the abstract of the paper. A text-classifier tool produced by OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, also performed poorly — it was able to spot AI-written introductions with an accuracy of around 10–55%.
The new ChatGPT catcher even performed well with introductions from journals it wasn’t trained on, and it caught AI text that was created from a variety of prompts, including one aimed to confuse AI detectors. However, the system is highly specialized for scientific journal articles. When presented with real articles from university newspapers, it failed to recognize them as being written by humans.
What the authors are doing is “something fascinating”, says Debora Weber-Wulff, a computer scientist who studies academic plagiarism at the HTW Berlin University of Applied Sciences. Many existing tools try to determine authorship by searching for the predictive text patterns of AI-generated writing rather than by looking at features of writing style, she says. “I’d never thought of using stylometrics on ChatGPT.”
But Weber-Wulff points out that there are other issues driving the use of ChatGPT in academia. Many researchers are under pressure to quickly churn out papers, she notes, or they might not see the process of writing a paper as an important part of science. AI-detection tools will not address these issues, and should not be seen as “a magic software solution to a social problem”.
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-023-03479-4
Desaire, H., Chua, A. E., Kim, M.-G. & Hua, D. Cell Rep. Phys. Sci. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xcrp.2023.101672 (2023).
Article  Google Scholar 
Desaire, H. et al. Cell Rep. Phys. Sci. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xcrp.2023.101426 (2023).
Article  Google Scholar 
Download references
Reprints and Permissions
How ChatGPT and other AI tools could disrupt scientific publishing
How ChatGPT is transforming the postdoc experience
Scientific sleuths spot dishonest ChatGPT use in papers
Scientists used ChatGPT to generate an entire paper from scratch — but is it any good?
How Nature readers are using ChatGPT
ChatGPT: five priorities for research
How big is science’s fake-paper problem?
News
Don’t overlook race and ethnicity: new guidelines urge change for psychology research
News
Open-access reformers launch next bold publishing plan
News Feature
The world’s week on AI safety: powerful computing efforts launched to boost research
News
Why the UK-led global AI summit is missing the point
Editorial
How AI can help to save endangered species
News
Garbage in, garbage out: mitigating risks and maximizing benefits of AI in research
Comment
AI ‘breakthrough’: neural net has human-like ability to generalize language
News
Living guidelines for generative AI — why scientists must oversee its use
Comment
It recruits top talent in mathematics and aims to establish a high-level international center for mathematical exchange.
Zhengzhou, Henan, China
Institute of Mathematics, Henan Academy of Sciences
We are now seeking outstanding candidates in Physics, Chemistry and Physical Sciences.
Dongguan, Guangdong, China
Great Bay University, China (GBU)
Situated in the historical and cultural city of Nanjing, CPU seeks talented scientists from the globe.
Nanjing, Jiangsu, China
China Pharmaceutical University
We seek outstanding applicants for full-time tenure-track/tenured faculty positions. Positions are available for both junior and senior-level.
Shenzhen, Guangdong, China
Southern University of Science and Technology (Biomedical Engineering)
Neuroscience Dept. at TUSM in Boston, MA, seeks candidates for a tenure-track faculty position focused on Excessive Pathological Selfishness (EPS).
Boston, Massachusetts (US)
Tufts University School of Medicine
You have full access to this article via your institution.

How ChatGPT and other AI tools could disrupt scientific publishing
How ChatGPT is transforming the postdoc experience
Scientific sleuths spot dishonest ChatGPT use in papers
Scientists used ChatGPT to generate an entire paper from scratch — but is it any good?
How Nature readers are using ChatGPT
ChatGPT: five priorities for research
An essential round-up of science news, opinion and analysis, delivered to your inbox every weekday.
Sign up for the Nature Briefing newsletter — what matters in science, free to your inbox daily.
Nature (Nature) ISSN 1476-4687 (online) ISSN 0028-0836 (print)
© 2023 Springer Nature Limited

source

Jesse
https://playwithchatgtp.com