Group meeting
Monday 29 December 2025 -
14:00
Monday 29 December 2025
14:00
Ethan's report
-
Ethan Muldoon
(
Oregon State University (US)
)
Ethan's report
Ethan Muldoon
(
Oregon State University (US)
)
14:00 - 14:20
Room: 405
14:20
Sean's report
-
Sean Gilligan
(
Oregon State University
)
Sean's report
Sean Gilligan
(
Oregon State University
)
14:20 - 14:40
Room: 405
14:40
Noah's report
-
Noah Vaughan
(
Oregon State University
)
Noah's report
Noah Vaughan
(
Oregon State University
)
14:40 - 15:00
Room: 405
15:00
Heidi's report
-
Heidi Marie Schellman
(
Oregon State University (US)
)
Heidi's report
Heidi Marie Schellman
(
Oregon State University (US)
)
15:00 - 15:20
Room: 405
Was able to build phlex
15:20
Paper of the week - OpenAI and sciene
-
Heidi Marie Schellman
(
Oregon State University (US)
)
Paper of the week - OpenAI and sciene
Heidi Marie Schellman
(
Oregon State University (US)
)
15:20 - 15:40
Room: 405
Questions to consider in reading this paper 1) Several of the authors work for private companies and probably own, or will own, significant # of shares in those corporations. Should they have disclosed their financial conflict of interest (in addition to their affiliations). 2) Are the results found as “novel” as advertised. I read the first example (section 1.1) and came to the conclusion that it seemed a trivial extension of an existing theorem with a proof that one might expect at the senior or beginning grad student level. 2 b) And, how ethical is it to state without including the resulting derivation and proof "We end this section by noting that our internal models, which can think for a few hours, were able to derive the optimal bound 1.75/L from scratch (i.e., without providing v1 of the paper in context, but simply asking the main question studied here directly).” 3) It would be useful for everyone to study section 2 which goes over ways in which chatGPT can be used (and misused) for literature searches.