There are multiple guidelines from publishers and organisations on the use of artificial intelligence(AI)in publishing.1–5 However,none are specific to family medicine.Most journals have some basic AI use recommendat...There are multiple guidelines from publishers and organisations on the use of artificial intelligence(AI)in publishing.1–5 However,none are specific to family medicine.Most journals have some basic AI use recommendations for authors,but more explicit direction is needed,as not all AI tools are the same.As family medicine journal editors,we want to provide a unified statement about AI in academic publishing for authors,editors,publishers and peer reviewers based on our current understanding of the field.The technology is advancing rapidly.While text generated from early large language models(LLMs)was relatively easy to identify,text generated from newer versions is getting progressively better at imitating human language and more challenging to detect.展开更多
文摘There are multiple guidelines from publishers and organisations on the use of artificial intelligence(AI)in publishing.1–5 However,none are specific to family medicine.Most journals have some basic AI use recommendations for authors,but more explicit direction is needed,as not all AI tools are the same.As family medicine journal editors,we want to provide a unified statement about AI in academic publishing for authors,editors,publishers and peer reviewers based on our current understanding of the field.The technology is advancing rapidly.While text generated from early large language models(LLMs)was relatively easy to identify,text generated from newer versions is getting progressively better at imitating human language and more challenging to detect.