The Conversation

Everyone who has seen a shampoo advert knows the “sciencey bit”, where they deviate into endorsements from researchers to reassure you that glowing hair is guaranteed. Product-makers have been invoking such stamps of scientific credibility since forever, often paying researchers to carry out studies to demonstrate their product’s value.

Too often, the findings contradict impartial research – as per recent output from the soft drink and red meat industries. And David Comerford, a behavioural economist at the University of Stirling, fears this “resmearch” now has a new enabler. Artificial intelligence makes it possible to churn out questionable studies in hours, vastly reducing the costs involved. He calls on peer-reviewed journals to introduce a series of reforms to ensure their reputations aren’t wrecked by a corporate feeding frenzy.

Ants have a superpower – at least if they’re of the Iberian harvester variety. The queens can give birth to two different species, as is fascinatingly explained here. And is bitcoin on its way to becoming a leading global currency? This history lesson on the many failed attempts to launch new money suggests otherwise.

Steven Vass

Senior Science and Technology Editor

Can this be trusted? Tilialucida

We risk a deluge of AI-written ‘science’ pushing corporate interests – here’s what to do about it

David Comerford, University of Stirling

We have to tighten up on what research policymakers rely on, and also the inner workings of peer review.

The Iberian harvester ant is able to give birth to ants from two different species. Wikimedia

One queen ant, two species: the discovery that reshapes what ‘family’ means in nature

Audrey O'Grady, University of Limerick; Nataliia Kosiuk, University of Limerick

One ant mother raises two species under the same roof.

Bukhta Yurii/Shutterstock

History is full of failed attempts to establish new currencies. So what makes crypto different?

Hiroki Shin, University of Birmingham

People need to understand and trust the money they use.

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