In this section, the UT Southwestern Health Sciences Library and Digital Learning Center (Library) has summarized the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) Assisted Technologies by submitted authors from select organizations and journal publishers. The list is not exhaustive.
As the Library cannot confirm the 100% accuracy on the publisher's or individual journal’s position on the use of AI Assisted Technologies, it is recommended that you use the provided information as a starting point of your review of the publisher's and/or journal’s Editorial Policies and Author Guidelines related to AI Assisted Technologies.
JAMA Network – Instructions for Authors
JAMA Network – includes JAMA® : the Journal of the American Medical Association, JAMA Network Open™, and the 11 JAMA Network™ specialty journals offer enhanced access to the research, reviews and perspectives shaping medicine today and into the future.
Author Responsibilities – applicable sections can include but not be limited to:
Authors should report the use of artificial intelligence, language models, machine learning, or similar technologies to create content or assist with writing or editing of manuscripts in the Acknowledgment section or the Methods section if this is part of formal research design or methods. This should include a description of the content that was created or edited and the name of the language model or tool, version and extension numbers, and manufacturer. (Note: this does not include basic tools for checking grammar, spelling, references, etc.)
Format My Manuscript – Manuscript Preparation and Submission Requirement
Reproduced and Re-created Material
JAMA does not republish text, tables, figures, or other material from other publishers, except under rare circumstances. Please delete any such material and replace with originals.
The submission and publication of content created by artificial intelligence, language models, machine learning, or similar technologies is discouraged, unless part of formal research design or methods, and is not permitted without clear description of the content that was created and the name of the model or tool, version and extension numbers, and manufacturer. Authors must take responsibility for the integrity of the content generated by these models and tools.
Authors are responsible for the accuracy and completeness of their references and for correct text citation. Number references in the order they appear in the text; do not alphabetize. In text, tables, and legends, identify references with superscript Arabic numerals. When listing references, follow AMA style and abbreviate names of journals according to the journals list in PubMed. List all authors and/or editors up to 6; if more than 6, list the first 3 followed by "et al." Note: Journal references should include the issue number in parentheses after the volume number. For more examples, see References.
The Artificial Intelligence (AI) Guide provides an introduction to this evolving field for faculty, fellows, residents, postdocs, students, and staff. Due to the rapid advancement of this emerging technology, information in the Guide may become outdated at times.
For information on Artificial Intelligence (AI) Data Security and Privacy, see Artificial Intelligence (AI) Data Security and Privacy - Information Resources (utsouthwestern.net), VPN/On Campus access only. NOTE: this Guide supplements but does not supersede information provided by UT Southwestern or University of Texas policies and guidelines.