Data Science Briefing #293

Issue #293

September 18, 2025


Book of the Week

Mark Carrigan’s "Generative AI for Academics" is a brisk, sensible map for using LLMs in scholarly life. It avoids both hype and doom, treating generative AI as a set of tools that demand judgment, not blind adoption. The tone is practical and reflective—ideal for faculty, PIs, and grad students who need shared language and guardrails.

The book shines in how it organizes academic work (Thinking, Collaborating, Communicating, Engaging), then pairs each with concrete practices (rubber-ducking, draft refinement, critical oversight). It isn’t a prompt cookbook or a windy manifesto; it’s a clear framework for responsible use, culture-setting, and policy discussions in departments and labs.

Data scientists and ML engineers will find valuable takeaways for literature synthesis, design reviews, code docs, and stakeholder comms. But if you want model internals, rigorous eval protocols, threat modeling, or MLOps patterns, the book skims the surface. Bottom line: keep it close for norms, ethics, and mentoring; pair it with technical playbooks when you need depth.

Generative AI for Academics

Generative AI for Academics


Links of the Week
  1. 1. AI enters the grant game, picking winners [science.org]
  2. 2. Learn Your Way: Reimagining textbooks with generative AI [research.google]
  3. 3. What Meta learned from Galactica, the doomed model launched two weeks before ChatGPT [venturebeat.com]
  4. 4. AI agents are coming for your privacy, warns Meredith Whittaker [economist.com]
  5. 5. AI-Scraping Free-for-All by OpenAI, Google, and Meta Is Over [nymag.com]
  6. 6. AI tool detects LLM-generated text in research papers and peer reviews [nature.com]
  7. 7. Defeating Nondeterminism in LLM Inference [thinkingmachines.ai]

Papers of the Week
Video of the Week

Machine Learning vs Human Learning: They’re Not Alike

Machine Learning vs Human Learning: They’re Not Alike

All our videos are also available in our YouTube playlist.


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