Journal Submissions Riddled With AI-Created Fake Citations
Journal Submissions Riddled With AI-Created Fake Citations
Publish Date: 2026-03-06 03:03:00
Source Domain: www.insidehighered.com
- An adjunct education professor unknowingly requested a fake paper that doesn’t exist, highlighting the problem of AI-generated fake citations.
- Professors Charles Hodges and Stephanie Moore were falsely attributed with a non-existent journal article which included a convincing DOI link.
- Another professor faced a similar situation when a book proposal listed an AI-created nonexistent edited volume.
- As AI technologies expand into academia, problems like phantom citations are increasingly common, affecting both academics and journal editors.
- Journal editors are noticing a rise in AI-generated fake citations and are struggling to identify these fabricated references.
- Academic journals are considering or already employing screening methods to catch AI-generated fake citations before they lead to the publication of spurious work.
- The prevalence of fake citations endangers good academic work, highlighting ethical concerns in the misuse of AI tools in academia.