While artificial intelligence has a long history, it is important for students and faculty to understand the ethical and legal implications of this technology, including the use of familiar programs like ChatGPT. This page discusses artificial intelligence as it relates to copyright law and how to maintain academic integrity while using these tools.
History & Ethical Issues
History of AI
“In the first half of the 20th century, science fiction familiarized the world with the concept of artificially intelligent robots…. By the 1950s, we had a generation of scientists, mathematicians, and philosophers with the concept of artificial intelligence (or AI) culturally assimilated in their minds.” – Rockwell Anyoha, Harvard University
Publishing & AI
General
- Publishers Policies, University of South Florida
- The Scholarly Kitchen
- Guest Post – AI and Scholarly Publishing: A View from Three Experts
- SSP Conference Debate: AI and the Integrity of Scholarly Publishing
- Who Is Going to Make Money from Artificial Intelligence in Scholarly Communications?
- The Role of Artificial Intelligence and Related Technologies in Academic Publishing and How it Might Transform the Way Publishers Work
- Can an artificial intelligence chatbot be the author of a scholarly article?
AI in the Classroom
Resources for Faculty
- International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education
- Office of Educational Technology
- Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Teaching and Learning
- Informed Pedagogy is the Key to Solving #AI Plagiarism
- Can ChatGPT write a case study? Ivey Professor Frank Li conducted an experiment to find out
- Teaching with ChatGPT: Assignment Design Tips & Ideas
- Harnessing Pandora’s Box: At the Intersection of Information Literacy and AI
- How can AI be used by university students?
- How Is AI Used In Education — Real World Examples Of Today And A Peek Into The Future
- 43 Examples of Artificial Intelligence in Education
- AI Exploration for Educators
- Here’s What Students Think About Using AI in the Classroom
Resources for Students
Plagiarism & Academic Honesty
- Clarkson University Libraries’ Plagiarism Guide
- Clarkson Student Regulations
- Citing AI Generated Writing by University of South Florida
- Citing AI in APA style
- Citing AI in MLA style
Should/Can I use AI for school work?
- Can I use Generative AI as a study tool?
- Guest Post — Artificial Intelligence Not Yet Intelligent Enough to be a Trusted Research Aid
- Don’t Use A.I. to Cheat in School. It’s Better for Studying
- 4 Ways You Should Use AI in Your Schoolwork
- Boost Your Productivity with Generative AI
Additional Information
Other Resources
- Clarkson Libraries’ Guide to Citing Sources
- Clarkson Libraries’ Guide to Copyright
- Clarkson Libraries’ Guide to Plagiarism
- Books on Artificial Intelligence
- Scholarly Research on Artificial Intelligence
- 20 Ted Talks on AI
- Machine Intelligence Research Institute
- The Conversation on AI
- Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Humans – Pew Research Center
- Artificial Intelligence journal
- IEEE Transactions on Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence and Law journal
- Journals related to artificial intelligence
- Growth trends for selected occupations considered at risk from automation