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Experts of the conference "GAI: Pro&Contra 2025". Section "Generative artificial intelligence in science"

Dear colleagues! We continue to introduce you to the experts and sections of the international conference "Generative Artificial Intelligence in Economic and Social Sectors: Pro&Contra 2025.
" Sergey Garbuk, Acting Director of the All-Russian Institute of Scientific and Technical Information of the Russian Academy of Sciences (VINITI RAS), Chairman of the National and Interstate Technical Committees for Standardization TC 164/MTK 566 "Artificial intelligence". Sergey Vladimirovich will act as moderator of the section "GII in education".
About the conference
"At this conference, we will try to follow at least two principles: to ensure a holistic coverage of possible uses of AI in scientific activities; to consider not only the opportunities that open up, but also the risks associated with the use of AI in solving relevant tasks. I would like to organize a truly scientific discussion on the problems hindering the use of AI in science and ways to overcome these problems."
About AI in VINITI RAS projects
"VINITI RAS's activities involve processing large amounts of scientific and technical information (STI). At the same time, the following tasks of such processing arise, in solving which generative AI (GII) can be potentially useful:
compression of STI – annotation and abstracting of texts. In addition to dramatically speeding up these processes, GII allows compression based on the interests and priorities of a particular user. This is basically impossible without appropriate automation technologies.;
compilation of scientific and technical texts with correct treatment of the difference in the authors' views on the problem, possible contradictions, etc.
When solving these problems, it is important for the functionally correct operation of AI systems, which excludes the distortion of scientific data in the form of biased, biased assessment of facts, omission of significant information and other distortions. There are also specific distortions for GII, for example, hallucination, which consists in incorrectly generalizing some scientific experience to a wider range of scenarios."