Skip to main content

Washington, United States | AFP

Climate change deniers are pushing an AI-generated paper questioning human-induced warming, leading experts to warn against the rise of research that is inherently flawed but marketed as neutral and scrupulously logical.

The paper rejects climate models on human-induced global warming and has been widely cited on social media as being the first “peer-reviewed” research led by artificial intelligence (AI) on the topic.

Titled ‘A Critical Reassessment of the Anthropogenic CO2-Global Warming Hypothesis’, it contains references contested by the scientific community, according to experts interviewed by AFP.

Computational and ethics researchers also cautioned against claims of neutrality in papers that use AI as an author.

The new study — which claims to be entirely written by Elon Musk’s Grok 3 AI — has gained traction online, with a blog post by Covid-19 contrarian Robert Malone promoting it gathering more than a million views.

“After the debacle of man-made climate change and the corruption of evidence-based medicine by big pharma, the use of AI for government-funded research will become normalized, and standards will be developed for its use in peer-reviewed journals,” Malone wrote.

There is overwhelming scientific consensus linking fossil fuel combustion to rising global temperatures and increasingly severe weather disasters.

Sunset over Oil Platform (s. pollution, climate, research)
Fossil fuels are the dominant cause of global warming. Credit: Ganesh Ramsumair | Pexels

Illusion of objectivity

Academics have warned that the surge of AI in research, despite potential benefits, risks triggering an illusion of objectivity and insight in scientific research.

“Large language models do not have the capacity to reason. They are statistical models predicting future words or phrases based on what they have been trained on. This is not research,” argued Mark Neff, an environmental sciences professor.

The paper says Grok 3 “wrote the entire manuscript,” with input from co-authors who “played a crucial role in guiding its development.”

Among the co-authors was astrophysicist Willie Soon -– a climate contrarian known to have received more than a million dollars in funding from the fossil fuel industry over the years.

Scientifically contested papers by physicist Hermann Harde and Soon himself were used as references for the AI’s analysis.

Microbiologist Elisabeth Bik, who tracks scientific malpractice, remarked the paper did not describe how it was written: “It includes datasets that formed the basis of the paper, but no prompts,” she noted. “We know nothing about how the authors asked the AI to analyze the data.”

Ashwinee Panda, a postdoctoral fellow on AI safety at the University of Maryland, said the claim that Grok 3 wrote the paper created a veneer of objectivity that was unverifiable.

“Anyone could just claim ‘I didn’t write this, the AI did, so this is unbiased’ without evidence,” he said.

Opaque review process

Neither the journal nor its publisher –- which seems to publish only one journal –- appear to be members of the Committee of Publication Ethics.

The paper acknowledges “the careful edits provided by a reviewer and the editor-in-chief,” identified on its website as Harde.

It does not specify whether it underwent open, single-, or double-blind review and was submitted and published within just 12 days.

“That an AI would effectively plagiarize nonsense papers,” does not come as a surprise to NASA’s top climate scientist Gavin Schmidt, but “this retread has just as little credibility,” he told AFP.

AFP reached out to the authors of the paper for further comment on the review process, but did not receive an immediate response.

“The use of AI is just the latest ploy, to make this seem as if it is a new argument, rather than an old, false one,” Naomi Oreskes, a science historian at Harvard University, told AFP.

mja/rl/aha

© Agence France-Presse

Article Source:
Press Release/Material by Manon JACOB | AFP
Featured image credit: kjpargeter | Freepik

High and low tide cause low and high methane fluxes
High and low tide cause low and high methane fluxesClimate

High and low tide cause low and high methane fluxes

By Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research Methane, a strong greenhouse gas that naturally escapes from the bottom of the North Sea, is affected by…
SourceSourceJuly 12, 2024 Full article
Kenyan fishers face increased drowning risk from climate change
Kenyan fishers face increased drowning risk from climate changeClimateScience

Kenyan fishers face increased drowning risk from climate change

By Krishna Ramanujan, Cornell University Fatal drownings are a big risk for small-scale fishers on Africa’s largest lake, with many of those deaths attributed to…
SourceSourceMay 27, 2024 Full article
Image of the day: The Koyukuk River in Alaska
Satellite Image: Alaska
Image of the day: The Koyukuk River in AlaskaClimate

Image of the day: The Koyukuk River in Alaska

This image from the Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellite, acquired on 2 October 2024, shows part of the Koyukuk River in Alaska, USA. The area has been…
SourceSourceDecember 1, 2024 Full article