Sorry, this entry is only available in Norsk.
(Norsk) Årsmarkering – Trond Mohn stiftelse
Leave a reply
The UiB guidelines for integrity and cheating have been updated. These also discuss the use of artificial intelligence. However, we see that students at the Faculty of Medicine need some clarification on this topic.
AI is an exciting and useful technology that can contribute to both learning and development for you as a student provided that you use it wisely. It is important to be aware of the ethical, legal and professional framework for AI-based tools. Keep in mind that no AI tool is truly intelligent – they’re just good at imitating human intelligence. A text generation tool is trained to answer your questions anyway. If it can’t find the answer in its database, it will be “creative” and answer something that it thinks might be true. If you criticize the answer you get, it will correct its original answer, even if you may be wrong. Although it is called artificial intelligence, such tools are not particularly intelligent. They struggle to distinguish between evidence-based facts and unsubstantiated claims, so-called “fake news”. In addition, they mainly use data and sources from Western, English-speaking countries and are currently poor on gender balance, cultural differences, and ethnic variation.
You can use this type of tools to increase your own learning and development, as well as learning to be critical to the answers. It is also worth noting that the various AI-tools available on the market are good at different things. ChatGPT-3.5still has the best language model and is the most creative, while Bing, Bard and ChatGPT-4 is better at up-to-date knowledge, references, and citations, because it uses the internet as a source. Grammarly is suitable for controlling grammar and spelling, Deepl for translation, while Elicit and Jenni are made for scientific summaries. These are just a few of the AI tools that have emerged in the past year. The various solutions will rapidly be more advanced and better at integrating more functions into the same model (multimodal models or foundation models).
Remember that you are here to learn and that it is neither appropriate nor confidence-inspiring to rely on AI to find answers to all questions in a busy professional life.
Here are some examples of what students can use AI for:
AI tools cannot be used for:
Academic integrity and Cheating | Division of Student and Academic Affairs | UiB
https://www.uib.no/student/164404/verkt%C3%B8y-basert-p%C3%A5-kunstig-intelligens-i-utdanning#plagiat-og-fusk-nbsp (not in English yet)
Student Use Cases for AI | Harvard Business Publishing Education
ChatGPT and artificial intelligence in higher education: quick start guide – UNESCO Digital Library
Sample Lecture: Friday, December 1, 2023, at 10:15 AM
Location: Auditorium, Armauer Hansens Hus, Haukelandsveien 28
Specified Topic: “Treatment of steatotic liver disease”
Dissertation Defense: Friday, December 1, 2023, at 12:15 PM
Location: Auditorium, Armauer Hansens Hus, Haukelandsveien 28
Thesis Title: “Primary sclerosing cholangitis. Surrogate markers of natural history, disease severity, and prognosis”
1st Opponent: Professor Maja Sofie Thiele, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
2nd Opponent: Professor Reidar Fossmark, NTNU
3rd Committee Member: Professor Simon Erling Dankel, University of Bergen
The defense will be chaired by Professor Silje Skrede.
Open to all interested parties.