Eric Larson

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Eric Larson

Eric Larson

@ec_larson

Associate Professor in Computer Science at Southern Methodist University, Dallas

Beigetreten Şubat 2011
109 Folgt160 Follower
Eric Larson retweetet
Rod
Rod@rodjnaquin·
I'm closely following new research showing a troubling gap in AI education tools. A 2026 MIT study gave students identical feedback—some told it was from their TA, others told it was AI. Both groups said the feedback was equally good, but students who thought a real person wrote it worked significantly harder afterward. The takeaway: even high-quality AI feedback fails to motivate students the way human attention does. Students need to feel seen by a real person to stay engaged and persist through challenges. open.substack.com/pub/drphilippa…
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Eric Larson
Eric Larson@ec_larson·
Nice paper, confirming what we are also seeing as educators (on a smaller scale in the paper, but good evidence that this is becoming a broader problem). arxiv.org/pdf/2601.20245
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Eric Larson retweetet
Andrew Akbashev
Andrew Akbashev@Andrew_Akbashev·
A really dangerous situation. Too many submissions. Too many generated papers. Little responsibility. 1. In 2026, more than 24,000 submissions were made to the International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML). It’s TWO times more than in 2025. To fight it, the organizers now require researchers to pay $100 for every subsequent paper. 2. LLM adoption has increased researcher productivity by 90% (there’s a recent paper in Science). 3. The number of papers is becoming far too high. Submissions to arXiv have risen by 50% since 2022. 4. There are simply not enough reviewers. Plus, many scientists no longer want to invest precious time in it for free. 5. We can’t easily identify AI-made papers from the genuine ones. __ Important words from Paul Ginsparg, a co-founder of arXiv: “AI slop frequently can’t be discriminated just by looking at abstract, or even by just skimming full text. This makes it an “existential threat” to the system.” Basically, we’re getting closer to the tipping point. 📍 Many professors blame the AI. But the problem is likely elsewhere: 1. Without a sufficient number of papers, many PIs can’t get funded. They have to prove their credibility to reviewers. Their proposals have to rely on prior publications. In many countries, there are some informal (or even formal) expectations for how many papers a group with a certain size has to publish to survive (funding-wise). 2. Our students / postdocs need papers if they want to be hired in faculty roles. Yes, some departments hire people with few publications. But the majority still want to ensure their faculty can get funded. If funding is partly a function of papers, this is used in decision-making. 3. The number of papers is important if you want to get high-level awards. Many of them are not given because you published one paper (even if it’s great). They are given because you made a meaningful CONTRIBUTION to the field. How do you make it? Publish more papers. 4. Tenure promotions in many places take the number of your papers into account (often indirectly). Your tenure may get delayed if you don’t publish enough. Not everywhere, but for many mid- to low-ranked universities this story is more or less the same. + There are many more to mention. 📍My opinion: Much of this is rooted in how funding is distributed. There is a strong correlation between the requirements at a university and the funding acquisition criteria. If funding were based ONLY on the quality of published papers, universities would hire people for the quality of their science. If funding agencies strongly discouraged publishing too many papers, universities wouldn’t expect numbers from faculty during promotions. And some supervisors wouldn’t pressure students and postdocs to publish unfinished studies and low-quality data. Yes, we need good detectors of fake papers. But we also need the right policies and better funding allocation criteria.
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Eric Larson retweetet
Robert Youssef
Robert Youssef@rryssf_·
Stanford and Caltech researchers just published the first comprehensive taxonomy of how llms fail at reasoning not a list of cherry-picked gotchas. a 2-axis framework that finally lets you compare failure modes across tasks instead of treating each one as a random anecdote the findings are uncomfortable
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Eyisha Zyer
Eyisha Zyer@eyishazyer·
NotebookLM just ended manual AI paper reading. They’ve released a new version for arXiv papers and it’s insane. It doesn’t just summarize papers. - It studies thousands of related sources - Connects the research for you - Explains everything back in audio like a real mentor And yes… it’s completely free.
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Rachel Davis Mersey
Rachel Davis Mersey@rdmersey·
Welcome to our exceptional cohort of new and returning Moody Graduate and Dissertation Fellows! Through their supportive community of dedicated staff, the Moody School of Graduate & Advanced Studies inspires graduate students to pursue their passions and become leaders in their fields.
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Toby J. Li😺 (he/him)
Toby J. Li😺 (he/him)@TobyJLi·
📢 We're hiring open-rank TT CS faculty at Notre Dame!! All areas are welcomed, with computer vision, software systems for robotics, and quantum computing being of particular interest. ♥️ Come and be my colleague! It's a fantastic dept. to be a part of. apply.interfolio.com/173442
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Eric Larson retweetet
Simmons School of Education & Human Development
📘🌟 We are proud to share that Dr. Jiun-Yu Wu, Professor at SMU Simmons, has been appointed as an Editor for Computers & Education - one of the most prestigious international journals at the intersection of teaching and learning, technology, AI, and the learning sciences (🔗bit.ly/41epa3q). Dr. Wu’s research bridges Learning Science, AI in Education, and Data Science, using AI-driven analytics to study learner engagement, track progress, and foster cognitive and socio-emotional growth 📈 📖 Read more on Simmons blog: 🔗bit.ly/41KQKFE and join us in congratulating Dr. Wu on this well-deserved recognition! 👏 #SMUSimmons #SMUSimmonsResearch #ComputersAndEducation #EducationResearch
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François Chollet
François Chollet@fchollet·
Important point from Deep Learning with Python...
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UbiComp
UbiComp@ubicomp·
🔥Call for Nominations: UbiComp Gaetano Borriello Outstanding Student Award ⌛️Deadline: August 27th, 2025, AOE. The student receiving this award will be recognized during the UbiComp/ISWC 2025 conference. More info: docs.google.com/document/d/1IU…
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Rachel Davis Mersey
Rachel Davis Mersey@rdmersey·
Very impressed after our tour of Pegasus Park with Suku Nair, SMU Vice Provost for Research and Innovation and Chief Innovation Officer. @JCHartzell and I are proud of the ways SMU researchers are developing advanced solutions to complex challenges to positively impact our region and beyond.
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Rachel Davis Mersey
Rachel Davis Mersey@rdmersey·
A day filled with learning! @JCHartzell and I were honored to engage with Dean Nader Jalili and senior leaders at @lyleengineering last week. The energy they bring to Engineering is powerful.⚡️ Thank you for championing excellence and for your commitment to shaping future engineering leaders!
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Akshay 🚀
Akshay 🚀@akshay_pachaar·
Learn how LLMs work under the hood! This is the best place to visually understand the internal workings of a transformer-based LLM. Explore tokenization, self-attention, and more in an interactive way:
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