Hello Andy! I attended a course given by Google to educators. There, they explained what constitutes a good prompt.There are five elements to writing a good prompt. These can be abbreviated as "PARTS of the prompt." P, stands for persona. Persona refers to the person's role. For example, I am a scholar. A, stands for aim. For example, I want to write a paper on critical thinking. R, stands for recipient. For example, it should be in a way that will convince SSCI journal editors. T, stands for theme. Here you need to define the boundaries of the paper. You should specify which topics you want it to emphasize. Finally, S stands for structure. You should specify what you want the output to be like. For example, how many pages you want it to be in bulleted form or paragraphs.
As a creator of AI academic tools (and PhD in AI myself) I don't see the progress of AI slowing. It is true that all AI tools use LLMs under the hood -- the differentiation comes in UI/UX, trust from customers, speed, and integrations (example with plagiarism checks). Nevertheless, I haven't had this feeling in a while seeing a tool supercharging researchers so much until LLMs. Looking forward to you covering more of AI tools as they evolve
Wow, hello Andy! I don't know if you remember me, but we met up in SF once while you were still podcasting (and your podcast got me through slogs of hours in the lab). I randomly thought of the podcast today and came looking to see what you're up to these days- and look at this channel! Well done! I'll be watching your videos on AI tools because I need to learn how to integrate them into my writing workflow, like yesterday. Hope you are doing well, so glad to see you thriving here.
We all know what your PhD dissertation is in, and I think it would be fascinating. Given the technology nowadays, and all the videos you created to take a topic you know nothing about and to attempt to write a masters level thesis or even an undergraduate level thesis. How can these tools and large language models at this point in time be used in the most efficient way possible you have you so many different models it would be interesting to see the iterative process from gathering all the scientific research papers where that source is coming from all the way to perhaps Some data analysis some visualization, and then obviously the putting together of the paper and final thoughts! Can it be done!
Please elaborate. Surely you are OK with using AI for certain types of scientific tasks, otherwise why would you be here. Apps like Elicit are useful for finding knowledge within academic work, apps like Afforai are great for chatting with journals and books, etc. I think it’s extreme to shame those who use AI for new knowledge. I mean, even Google Scholar is an AI tool to find new knowledge, isn’t it?
This is a bit ridiculous. AI is great for making connections and generating possible directions to look into for new areas of knowledge, it however is obviously not doing the research itself.
@@diodio520is this some sort of red herring? A robot is a tool. I’ve worked plenty in manufacturing in the Midwest. They pay the factory workers to set up the materials for assembly, to maintain it, and make corrections when it goes down. Just like any other production line in the world. As you were saying….?
Hello Andy! I attended a course given by Google to educators. There, they explained what constitutes a good prompt.There are five elements to writing a good prompt. These can be abbreviated as "PARTS of the prompt." P, stands for persona. Persona refers to the person's role. For example, I am a scholar. A, stands for aim. For example, I want to write a paper on critical thinking. R, stands for recipient. For example, it should be in a way that will convince SSCI journal editors. T, stands for theme. Here you need to define the boundaries of the paper. You should specify which topics you want it to emphasize. Finally, S stands for structure. You should specify what you want the output to be like. For example, how many pages you want it to be in bulleted form or paragraphs.
Your T-shirt colour matches CGPT’s logo. Is CGPT also hiding behind you? 😂
Love your videos Andy!! Always practical and helpful. Thank you
As a creator of AI academic tools (and PhD in AI myself) I don't see the progress of AI slowing. It is true that all AI tools use LLMs under the hood -- the differentiation comes in UI/UX, trust from customers, speed, and integrations (example with plagiarism checks). Nevertheless, I haven't had this feeling in a while seeing a tool supercharging researchers so much until LLMs. Looking forward to you covering more of AI tools as they evolve
Wow, hello Andy! I don't know if you remember me, but we met up in SF once while you were still podcasting (and your podcast got me through slogs of hours in the lab). I randomly thought of the podcast today and came looking to see what you're up to these days- and look at this channel! Well done! I'll be watching your videos on AI tools because I need to learn how to integrate them into my writing workflow, like yesterday. Hope you are doing well, so glad to see you thriving here.
I remember you, Allison! Thanks so much for this message. I'm in Boston from the 9th until the 20th if you are in that area these days.
@@DrAndyStapleton Based in SoCal now- give a shout if you're ever in LA or San Diego!
9:05 The final “ding” effect 😂
Andy, when are you going to review InfraNodus or a similar mapping and knowledge graphing apps?
Super helpful thank you
Just one correction anthropic is Claude. You mentioned as it will be a different LLM.
Glad to know I'm not the only one being nice to AI, just in case.
So helpful thanks 🙌LabLeaz is another tool I’ve found super useful.
Thank you 💚 Can you suggest a complete tools kit for master's degree student in microbiology? - yournew follower from Syria. 😁
We all know what your PhD dissertation is in, and I think it would be fascinating. Given the technology nowadays, and all the videos you created to take a topic you know nothing about and to attempt to write a masters level thesis or even an undergraduate level thesis. How can these tools and large language models at this point in time be used in the most efficient way possible you have you so many different models it would be interesting to see the iterative process from gathering all the scientific research papers where that source is coming from all the way to perhaps Some data analysis some visualization, and then obviously the putting together of the paper and final thoughts! Can it be done!
🕊
Love your content!Interested in collab? :)
Zero respect to the scientist prompting AI for the new knowledge.
Please elaborate. Surely you are OK with using AI for certain types of scientific tasks, otherwise why would you be here. Apps like Elicit are useful for finding knowledge within academic work, apps like Afforai are great for chatting with journals and books, etc. I think it’s extreme to shame those who use AI for new knowledge. I mean, even Google Scholar is an AI tool to find new knowledge, isn’t it?
AI gives you a map to the city, but for true understanding, YOU have to walk the streets. It’s a dialectical relationship.
This is a bit ridiculous. AI is great for making connections and generating possible directions to look into for new areas of knowledge, it however is obviously not doing the research itself.
@@dkcarey1 Why don't they pay factory workers for the work that robots do? 🤔
@@diodio520is this some sort of red herring? A robot is a tool. I’ve worked plenty in manufacturing in the Midwest. They pay the factory workers to set up the materials for assembly, to maintain it, and make corrections when it goes down. Just like any other production line in the world. As you were saying….?