The prestigious MIA University announced that it would no longer support one of the most expensive artificial intelligence research articles written by a PhD student at the university.
An article published by Aiden Tonurgarz, claiming to use an artificial intelligence tool in a material science laboratory had significantly increased the number of new materials discovery.
But now MTA has said in an official statement that “no assurance of the source, reliability of data or the accuracy of the results” of this study. The university added that the author is no longer present at the MIT and has called for the removal of the article from the Arxiv Research Platform and stopped reviewing it in the reputable Quarterly Journal of Economics.
The study was previously admired by two prominent MIT economists, Daron Ajamoglu (Nobel Professional Economics 2) and David Ator. But in January, a computer science scientist expressed his doubt about the alleged artificial intelligence mechanism and the accuracy of the innovation in that laboratory.
Subsequently, Ajamoglu and Ator reported the matter to university officials and the internal investigation began. The MIA has not disclosed the details of the article due to student privacy laws, and the author himself has not responded to the media so far.
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