MoonLightBlog
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • LifeStyle
  • Gaming
  • Sport
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Fashion
  • Technology
  • Economy
  • LifeStyle
  • Gaming
  • Sport
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Fashion
  • Technology
  • Economy
No Result
View All Result
MoonLightBlog
No Result
View All Result
Home Technology

Irony alert: Hallucinated citations found in papers from NeurIPS, the prestigious AI conference

Reading Time: 2 mins read
0

AI detection startup GPTZero scanned all 4,841 papers accepted by the prestigious Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS), which took place last month in San Diego. The company found 100 hallucinated citations across 51 papers that it confirmed as fake, the company tells TechCrunch. 

RELATED POSTS

Astronaut Katherine Bennell-Pegg named Australian of the Year for 2026

U.K. lawsuit seeks ban on smartphones in schools to protect children

Sir Mark Tully, the BBC’s ‘voice of India’, dies aged 90

Having a paper accepted by NeurIPS is a résumé-worthy achievement in the world of AI. Given that these are the leading minds of AI research, one might assume they would use LLMs for the catastrophically boring task of writing citations.

So caveats abound with this finding: 100 confirmed hallucinated citations across 51 papers is not statistically significant. Each paper has dozens of citations. So out of tens of thousands of citations, this is, statistically, zero. 

It’s also important to note that an inaccurate citation doesn’t negate the paper’s research. As NeurIPS told Fortune, which was first to report on GPTZero’s research, “Even if 1.1% of the papers have one or more incorrect references due to the use of LLMs, the content of the papers themselves [is] not necessarily invalidated.” 

But having said all that, a faked citation is not a nothing, either. NeurIPS prides itself on its “rigorous scholarly publishing in machine learning and artificial intelligence,” it says. And each paper is peer-reviewed by multiple people who are instructed to flag hallucinations.  

Citations are also a sort of currency for researchers. They are used as a career metric to show how influential a researcher’s work is among their peers. When AI makes them up, it waters down their value.

No one can fault the peer reviewers for not catching a few AI-fabricated citations given the sheer volume involved. GPTZero is also quick to point this out. The goal of the exercise was to offer specific data on how AI slop sneaks in via “a submission tsunami” that has “strained these conferences’ review pipelines to the breaking point,” the startup says in its report. GPTZero even points to a May 2025 paper called “The AI Conference Peer Review Crisis” that discussed the problem at premiere conferences, including NeurIPS. 

Buy JNews
ADVERTISEMENT
Techcrunch event
San Francisco | October 13-15, 2026

Still, why couldn’t the researchers themselves fact-check the LLM’s work for accuracy? Surely they must know the actual list of papers they used for their work. 

What the whole thing really points to is one big, ironic takeaway: If the world’s leading AI experts, with their reputations at stake, can’t ensure their LLM usage is accurate in the details, what does that mean for the rest of us? 

Originally published at TechCrunch

Tags: artificial-intelligencetechnology

Related Posts

Technology

Astronaut Katherine Bennell-Pegg named Australian of the Year for 2026

Technology

U.K. lawsuit seeks ban on smartphones in schools to protect children

Technology

Sir Mark Tully, the BBC’s ‘voice of India’, dies aged 90

Technology

National cabinet to meet on Friday on health and disability funding – as it happened

Technology

Unconfirmed sighting of triple murder suspect Julian Ingram reported in NSW central west

Technology

All sorts of interesting flags and artifacts will fly to the Moon on Artemis II

Next Post

Keys, Pegula advance in all-American matchups

All sorts of interesting flags and artifacts will fly to the Moon on Artemis II

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended Stories

Roger Federer: The Maestro of Tennis Trophies

Roger Federer: The Maestro of Tennis Trophies

Exploring Mood: A Comprehensive Overview

Exploring Mood: A Comprehensive Overview

9 Must-Try Foods from Egypt: A Culinary Adventure

9 Must-Try Foods from Egypt: A Culinary Adventure

Popular Stories

  • Amazon Deutschland: ein vielfältiger Online-Marktplatz für alle Bedürfnisse

    Amazon Deutschland: ein vielfältiger Online-Marktplatz für alle Bedürfnisse

    607 shares
    Share 243 Tweet 152
  • Why americandream.com Is Redefining What It Means to “Go Out” in America

    261 shares
    Share 104 Tweet 65
  • Elevating the Cannabis Experience: Why Mood is Redefining the Industry

    259 shares
    Share 104 Tweet 65
  • Amazon.de – Der Marktplatz für alles: Eine umfassende Einführung

    238 shares
    Share 95 Tweet 60
  • Prémium divat elérhető közelségben – miért érdemes a Gomez mellett dönteni

    220 shares
    Share 88 Tweet 55

MoonLightBlog

Recent Posts

  • Astronaut Katherine Bennell-Pegg named Australian of the Year for 2026
  • U.K. lawsuit seeks ban on smartphones in schools to protect children
  • Sir Mark Tully, the BBC’s ‘voice of India’, dies aged 90

Categories

  • Economy
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Gaming
  • LifeStyle
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • Travel

© 2025 - moonlightblog.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Subscription
  • Category
    • Economy
    • Lifestyle
    • Travel
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2025 - moonlightblog.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?