/AI13h ago

Org Sci Study Finds AI Increases Paper Output but Produces Slop

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Recent studies show AI is helping people pump out more papers. But are those papers good or slop? The recent Org Sci paper on this topic is probably the best evidence we have right now. (Caveats: just one journal, etc)

TLDR: Slop

A quick thread (1/n)

8:17 PM · Jun 7, 2026 · 38.9K Views
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Users praised the study on AI boosting research submissions while lowering quality as convincing and highlighted AI's substantial long-term benefits to science.

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AI-heavy reviews aren't affecting editorial decisions much (yet), likely because editors discount them. Important caveat to keep in mind re: studies showing AI-evaluation systems prefer AI-produced stuff. (6/n)

13hViews 30
LIKES1

Are these AI-augmented papers any good? 1. Writing quality seems bad -- I didn't put much faith into these generic, automated measures before seeing the results, but it's clear they are catching *something*. AI is making texts harder to read, more jargon (3/n)

13hViews 19Likes 1
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2. Editorial judgment: More importantly/directly, papers with more AI use more likely to get desk rejected! This is the crucial piece of evidence. Fully AI written papers --> 70% desk rejection rate (4/n)

13hViews 25

Already 30% of reviews show *substantial* AI use. These reviews have lower writing quality (again using the generic automated measures), and, most interestingly: - focus more on theory/framing - focus less on data - have a narrower focus (5/n)

13hViews 10

Overall, a really nice and convincing paper, props to the authors. AI will undoubtedly benefit science a LOT in the medium-to-long run, but in the short run, and at least in management scholarship, the benefits are ... fuzzy. (7/7)

https://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/10.1287/orsc.2026.ed.v37.n3

13hViews 29