Creating more academic dishonesty than it detects!

It has been a while since Angry Bear has posted one of Sandwichman’s piece. I have a similar ideology as Sandwichman has when it comes to manufacturing, etc. My approach is in the plants or in the actual supply chain. This is an interesting piece about academic issues.

“Artificial intelligence creates more academic dishonesty than it detects!”

Back in December, 2024, The Wall Street Journal carried a feature on an economics preprint research article that showed surprising findings. David Autor and Daron Acemoglu lauded the preprint. “It’s fantastic,” said Acemoglu. “I was floored,” said Autor. The two economists appeared in a photo flanking the author, Aidan Toner-Rodgers. Turns out Autor was right. The paper was fantastic, but not in a good way.

On May 16, The WSJ reported on the unraveling of the tale under a headline proclaiming, “MIT Says It No Longer Stands Behind Student’s AI Research Paper”: “The paper was championed by MIT economists Daron Acemoglu, who won the 2024 economics Nobel, and David Autor. The two said they were approached in January by a computer scientist with experience in materials science who questioned how the technology worked, and how a lab that he wasn’t aware of had experienced gains in innovation. Unable to resolve those concerns, they brought it to the attention of MIT, which began conducting a review. 

MIT’s press release stated it “has no confidence in the provenance, reliability or validity of the data and has no confidence in the veracity of the research contained in the paper.”

Autor was “heartbroken” by the developments, “More than just embarrassing, it’s heartbreaking,” he said.

Leading economists from Paul Samuelson to Paul Krugman have labored to allay the fear that technological advances may reduce overall employment, causing mass unemployment as workers are displaced by machines. This ‘lump of labor fallacy’—positing that there is a fixed amount of work to be done so that increased labor productivity reduces employment —is intuitively appealing and demonstrably false.

Economists have historically rejected the concerns of the Luddites as an example of the ‘lump of labor’ fallacy, the supposition that an increase in labor productivity inevitably reduces employment because there is only a finite amount of work to do.

Daron Acemoglu appears to be from the same Planet as Autor. In Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty, Acemoglu and his co-author James Robinson wrote that “Luddites” burned down the house of “John Kay, English inventor of the flying shuttle” in 1753. The fictional redresser, Ned Ludd, did not appear on the scene until November 1811. The story of the house burning down may be apocryphal. Early accounts of John Kay’s invention do not mention it. Later, some sources say that his son, or brother, Robert was the victim. Yet others say that his house was broken into and the machines in it smashed.