AI Expands Scientists' Impact but Contracts Science's Focus (2412.07727v1)
Abstract: The rapid rise of AI in science presents a paradox. Analyzing 67.9 million research papers across six major fields using a validated LLM (F1=0.876), we explore AI's impact on science. Scientists who adopt AI tools publish 67.37% more papers, receive 3.16 times more citations, and become team leaders 4 years earlier than non-adopters. This individual success correlates with concerning on collective effects: AI-augmented research contracts the diameter of scientific topics studied, and diminishes follow-on scientific engagement. Rather than catalyzing the exploration of new fields, AI accelerates work in established, data-rich domains. This pattern suggests that while AI enhances individual scientific productivity, it may simultaneously reduce scientific diversity and broad engagement, highlighting a tension between personal advancement and collective scientific progress.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.