Charting the Future of Scholarly Knowledge with AI: A Community Perspective

Jiomekong, Azanzi, McGinty, Hande Küçük, Mills, Keith G., Oelen, Allard, Rajabi, Enayat, McElroy, Harry, Christou, Antrea, Saini, Anmol, Zebaze, Janice Anta, Kim, Hannah, Jacyszyn, Anna M., Auer, Sören

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

Scholarly work and communication encompass the entire system in which research and creative works are created, evaluated for quality, disseminated to the academic community and beyond, used, and preserved for future use. It includes formal publications, such as journal articles and books, as well as informal sharing through preprints, conference presentations, data sharing, and broader engagement with scholarly works and research outputs. Scholarly knowledge serves as the primary engine of progress, shaping our world and guiding our collective future. It forms the backbone of technological advancement, public health systems, and sustainable environmental practices. Obtained through rigorous methods of observation, experimentation, and validation, it is a reliable resource that helps societies solve complex problems and improve the quality of life by achieving sustainable development goals (SDGs) [6]. To be truly useful, scholarly knowledge must first be systematically extracted and organized. However, the scholarly community of today faces the problem of an overload of scientific papers in their respective domains. There is an increasing number of papers published every year (currently, 3 million), in addition to more than 200 million papers that have already been published . This gives rise to the research question: "How can we provide a reliable and living scholarly knowledge base that empowers researchers to query, synthesize, and analyze the vast body of scholarly knowledge?"