Close Menu
    DevStackTipsDevStackTips
    • Home
    • News & Updates
      1. Tech & Work
      2. View All

      Sunshine And March Vibes (2025 Wallpapers Edition)

      May 14, 2025

      The Case For Minimal WordPress Setups: A Contrarian View On Theme Frameworks

      May 14, 2025

      How To Fix Largest Contentful Paint Issues With Subpart Analysis

      May 14, 2025

      How To Prevent WordPress SQL Injection Attacks

      May 14, 2025

      I test a lot of AI coding tools, and this stunning new OpenAI release just saved me days of work

      May 14, 2025

      How to use your Android phone as a webcam when your laptop’s default won’t cut it

      May 14, 2025

      The 5 most customizable Linux desktop environments – when you want it your way

      May 14, 2025

      Gen AI use at work saps our motivation even as it boosts productivity, new research shows

      May 14, 2025
    • Development
      1. Algorithms & Data Structures
      2. Artificial Intelligence
      3. Back-End Development
      4. Databases
      5. Front-End Development
      6. Libraries & Frameworks
      7. Machine Learning
      8. Security
      9. Software Engineering
      10. Tools & IDEs
      11. Web Design
      12. Web Development
      13. Web Security
      14. Programming Languages
        • PHP
        • JavaScript
      Featured

      Strategic Cloud Partner: Key to Business Success, Not Just Tech

      May 14, 2025
      Recent

      Strategic Cloud Partner: Key to Business Success, Not Just Tech

      May 14, 2025

      Perficient’s “What If? So What?” Podcast Wins Gold at the 2025 Hermes Creative Awards

      May 14, 2025

      PIM for Azure Resources

      May 14, 2025
    • Operating Systems
      1. Windows
      2. Linux
      3. macOS
      Featured

      Windows 11 24H2’s Settings now bundles FAQs section to tell you more about your system

      May 14, 2025
      Recent

      Windows 11 24H2’s Settings now bundles FAQs section to tell you more about your system

      May 14, 2025

      You can now share an app/browser window with Copilot Vision to help you with different tasks

      May 14, 2025

      Microsoft will gradually retire SharePoint Alerts over the next two years

      May 14, 2025
    • Learning Resources
      • Books
      • Cheatsheets
      • Tutorials & Guides
    Home»Development»Artificial Intelligence»3 Questions: Visualizing research in the age of AI

    3 Questions: Visualizing research in the age of AI

    May 14, 2025

    For over 30 years, science photographer Felice Frankel has helped MIT professors, researchers, and students communicate their work visually. Throughout that time, she has seen the development of various tools to support the creation of compelling images: some helpful, and some antithetical to the effort of producing a trustworthy and complete representation of the research. In a recent opinion piece published in Nature magazine, Frankel discusses the burgeoning use of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) in images and the challenges and implications it has for communicating research. On a more personal note, she questions whether there will still be a place for a science photographer in the research community.

    Q: You’ve mentioned that as soon as a photo is taken, the image can be considered “manipulated.” There are ways you’ve manipulated your own images to create a visual that more successfully communicates the desired message. Where is the line between acceptable and unacceptable manipulation?

    A: In the broadest sense, the decisions made on how to frame and structure the content of an image, along with which tools used to create the image, are already a manipulation of reality. We need to remember the image is merely a representation of the thing, and not the thing itself. Decisions have to be made when creating the image. The critical issue is not to manipulate the data, and in the case of most images, the data is the structure. For example, for an image I made some time ago, I digitally deleted the petri dish in which a yeast colony was growing, to bring attention to the stunning morphology of the colony. The data in the image is the morphology of the colony. I did not manipulate that data. However, I always indicate in the text if I have done something to an image. I discuss the idea of image enhancement in my handbook, “The Visual Elements, Photography.”

    Q: What can researchers do to make sure their research is communicated correctly and ethically?

    A: With the advent of AI, I see three main issues concerning visual representation: the difference between illustration and documentation, the ethics around digital manipulation, and a continuing need for researchers to be trained in visual communication. For years, I have been trying to develop a visual literacy program for the present and upcoming classes of science and engineering researchers. MIT has a communication requirement which mostly addresses writing, but what about the visual, which is no longer tangential to a journal submission? I will bet that most readers of scientific articles go right to the figures, after they read the abstract. 

    We need to require students to learn how to critically look at a published graph or image and decide if there is something weird going on with it. We need to discuss the ethics of “nudging” an image to look a certain predetermined way. I describe in the article an incident when a student altered one of my images (without asking me) to match what the student wanted to visually communicate. I didn’t permit it, of course, and was disappointed that the ethics of such an alteration were not considered. We need to develop, at the very least, conversations on campus and, even better, create a visual literacy requirement along with the writing requirement.

    Q: Generative AI is not going away. What do you see as the future for communicating science visually?

    A: For the Nature article, I decided that a powerful way to question the use of AI in generating images was by example. I used one of the diffusion models to create an image using the following prompt:

    “Create a photo of Moungi Bawendi’s nano crystals in vials against a black background, fluorescing at different wavelengths, depending on their size, when excited with UV light.”

    The results of my AI experimentation were often cartoon-like images that could hardly pass as reality — let alone documentation — but there will be a time when they will be. In conversations with colleagues in research and computer-science communities, all agree that we should have clear standards on what is and is not allowed. And most importantly, a GenAI visual should never be allowed as documentation.

    But AI-generated visuals will, in fact, be useful for illustration purposes. If an AI-generated visual is to be submitted to a journal (or, for that matter, be shown in a presentation), I believe the researcher MUST

    • clearly label if an image was created by an AI model;
    • indicate what model was used;
    • include what prompt was used; and
    • include the image, if there is one, that was used to help the prompt.

    Source: Read More 

    Facebook Twitter Reddit Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleRobotic helper making mistakes? Just nudge it in the right direction
    Next Article LWiAI Podcast #201 – GPT 4.5, Sonnet 3.7, Grok 3, Phi 4

    Related Posts

    Artificial Intelligence

    Markus Buehler receives 2025 Washington Award

    May 14, 2025
    Artificial Intelligence

    LWiAI Podcast #201 – GPT 4.5, Sonnet 3.7, Grok 3, Phi 4

    May 14, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Continue Reading

    Unity Catalog and the Well-Architected Lakehouse in Databricks

    Development

    Ripple NPM supply chain attack hunts for private keys

    Security

    Microsoft offers $4 million in AI and cloud bug bounties – how to qualify

    Development

    Man sentenced to 7 years in prison for role in $50m internet scam

    Development

    Highlights

    Hiring Kit: IT Audit Director

    December 20, 2024

    Security measures and other IT controls only work if they are implemented consistently, predictably, and…

    Spotify goes down: What we know, plus our favorite alternatives to try

    April 16, 2025

    CVE-2025-2817 – Mozilla Firefox System File Privilege Escalation

    April 29, 2025

    CVE-2025-27532 – “ctrlX OS Web Application Backup & Restore Authentication Bypass”

    April 30, 2025
    © DevStackTips 2025. All rights reserved.
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.