When AI Breaks the Scholarly Record: Why Attribution Matters More Than Ever

Dec 10, 2025

When AI Breaks the Scholarly Record: Why Attribution Matters More Than Ever

Every generation of scholars inherits a body of ideas, debates, and discoveries built by those who came before them. This is the scholarly record—the evolving framework that helps academics measure progress, test claims, and build new knowledge.

That record has always depended on a simple but essential principle: give credit where credit is due.

Today, generative AI threatens that foundation in ways higher education has never experienced.

The Challenge Emerging in Higher Education

In our conversation with Scholarly Communications Librarian Rachel Sweeney, she described how generative AI tools—trained on vast amounts of scraped data—produce text that appears authoritative but often lacks the academic backbone required for scholarship.

The risks are real and growing:

  • AI generates citations that don’t exist.
  • Content scraped from scholars is reused without attribution.
  • Journal editors are flooded with AI-written submissions.
  • Recursive training leads to “AI slop”—degraded, error-filled outputs.
  • Students and researchers may unknowingly rely on unverified information.

This erosion of attribution disrupts the very mechanism through which scholarly ideas evolve.

Toward a More Responsible Way Forward

While AI isn’t going away, academia can reinforce the practices that maintain scholarly integrity. Rachel shared several actionable strategies:

  • Verify every citation AI provides—never assume accuracy.
  • Use AI as an assistant, not a ghostwriter—keep humans in control of meaning-making.
  • Maintain ORCID and Google Scholar profiles to increase visibility and protect attribution.
  • Require students to evaluate sources manually, regardless of how the text was generated.
  • Consult librarians when navigating copyright and fair use concerns.

Rather than fear AI, we must teach learners to use it with intellectual honesty.

Reclaiming Integrity in an AI Landscape

AI can accelerate aspects of research—but it cannot replace the cognitive work that makes scholarship rigorous. When educators, librarians, and students engage with AI critically, they strengthen the scholarly record rather than dilute it.

The future of academic integrity will belong to institutions that use AI transparently, thoughtfully, and responsibly.

To hear the full conversation with Rachel Sweeney—including examples from Hollywood, journalism, and higher ed—listen to the latest episode of the Engaged By Design Podcast.

Stay connected with news and updates!

Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates from our team.
Don't worry, your information will not be shared.

We hate SPAM. We will never sell your information, for any reason.