Artificial Intelligence-Generated Writing in the ERAS Personal Statement: An Emerging Quandary for Post-graduate Medical Education.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Hugh Burke, Rebecca Kazinka, Raghu Gandhi, Aimee Murray
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Abstract

Objective: This study was designed to investigate if artificial intelligence (AI) detection software can determine the use of AI in personal statements for residency applications.

Method: Previously written personal statements were collected from physicians who had already matched to residency through the Electronic Residency Application System. Physicians were recruited for the study through collegial relationships and were given study information via email. The study team constructed five parallel statements from the shared personal statements to prompt AI to create a personal statement of similar content. An online AI detection tool, GPTZero, was used to assess all the personal statements. Statistical analyses were conducted using R. Descriptive statistics, t-tests, and Pearson correlations were used to assess the data.

Results: Eight physicians' statements were compared to eight AI-generated statements. GPTZero was able to correctly identify AI-generated writing, assigning them significantly higher AI probability scores compared to human-authored essays. Human-generated statements were considered more readable, used shorter words with fewer syllables, and had more sentences compared to AI-generated essays. Longer average sentence length, low readability scores, and high SAT word percentages were strongly associated with AI-generated essays.

Conclusions: This study shows the capacity of GPTZero to distinguish human-created versus AI-generated writing. Use of AI can pose significant ethical challenges and carries a risk of inadvertent harm to certain applicants and erosion of trust in the application process. Authors suggest standardization of protocol regarding the use of AI prior to its integration in post-graduate medical education.

人工智能生成的 ERAS 个人陈述写作:医学研究生教育的新难题。
研究目的本研究旨在调查人工智能(AI)检测软件能否确定在住院医师申请的个人陈述中是否使用了人工智能:方法:从已通过住院医师电子申请系统匹配到住院医师的医生中收集之前撰写的个人陈述。通过同事关系招募医生参与研究,并通过电子邮件向他们提供研究信息。研究小组从共享的个人陈述中构建了五份平行陈述,以促使人工智能创建内容相似的个人陈述。在线人工智能检测工具 GPTZero 用于评估所有个人陈述。采用描述性统计、t 检验和皮尔逊相关性对数据进行评估:结果:八位医生的陈述与八份人工智能生成的陈述进行了比较。GPTZero 能够正确识别人工智能生成的文章,与人类撰写的文章相比,其人工智能概率得分明显更高。与人工智能生成的文章相比,人类生成的文章被认为可读性更高,使用的单词更短,音节更少,句子更多。平均句子长度较长、可读性得分较低以及 SAT 单词百分比较高与人工智能生成的文章密切相关:这项研究表明,GPTZero 能够区分人类创作的文章和人工智能生成的文章。使用人工智能可能会带来重大的道德挑战,并有可能无意中伤害某些申请人,削弱对申请过程的信任。作者建议,在将人工智能纳入医学研究生教育之前,应将有关人工智能使用的协议标准化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
20.00%
发文量
157
期刊介绍: Academic Psychiatry is the international journal of the American Association of Chairs of Departments of Psychiatry, American Association of Directors of Psychiatric Residency Training, Association for Academic Psychiatry, and Association of Directors of Medical Student Education in Psychiatry. Academic Psychiatry publishes original, scholarly work in psychiatry and the behavioral sciences that focuses on innovative education, academic leadership, and advocacy. The scope of the journal includes work that furthers knowledge and stimulates evidence-based advances in academic psychiatry in the following domains: education and training, leadership and administration, career and professional development, ethics and professionalism, and health and well-being.
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