“Certainly, here is a possible introduction for your topic...”,
began a recent article in Surfaces and Interfaces, a scientific
journal. Attentive readers might have wondered who exactly that
bizarre opening line was addressing. They might also have wondered
whether the article was written by a human or by a machine.
It is a question ever more readers of scientific papers are
asking. LLMs (Large Language Models) are now more than good
enough to help write a scientific paper. They can breathe life into
dense scientific prose and speed up the drafting process, especially
for non-native English speakers. Such use also comes with risks:
LLMs are particularly susceptible to reproducing biases, for
example, and can churn out vast amounts of plausible nonsense.
Internet:<economist.com>(adapted).
According to the information stated in the preceding text and the
vocabulary used in it, judge the following item.
The word “biases” (last sentence of the text) is, in its
context, an adverb.