From Retraction Watch:
Fabricated citations in the biomedical literature have increased 12-fold in two years, according to an audit of nearly 2.5 million papers published as a letter to The Lancet today.
The analysis of articles indexed in PubMed found that about one in 277 papers published in the first seven weeks of 2026 referenced a paper that didn’t exist. That was a jump from 2025’s rate of one in 458 and 2023’s one in 2,828. The researchers, led by Maxim Topaz of Columbia University’s Data Science Institute, used AI to “distinguish genuine fabrications from formatting discrepancies such as informally abbreviated titles.”
Topaz’s group located the sharpest increase in hallucinated references in mid-2024, which they note coincided with the rise of AI writing tools. The findings come as Nature reported last month that tens of thousands of publications from 2025 “might include invalid references generated by AI.” Retraction Watch has seen its fair share of reports of hallucinated citations generated by LLMs like ChatGPT.
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Mohammad Hosseini, a researcher in biostatistics and informatics at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, called The Lancet analysis “simplistic.” In a March paper, Hosseini and Resnik made a point of distinguishing between hallucinated citations that matter to a paper’s scientific conclusions and those that do not. Topaz’s group didn’t differentiate scientifically critical references – which effectively function as data – from those that were relatively less important, Hosseini said.
Hosseini told us the study represents “low-hanging fruit” and the “tip of the iceberg.” He said the “bigger and more important problem” remains citations generated by AI that aren’t wholly hallucinated but are inaccurate, biased or incomplete. “We are far from being able to even detect them or do anything about them,” he said.
Learn More, Read the Complete Article (about 1290 words)
See Also: Fabricated Citations: An Audit Across 2·5 Million Biomedical Papers (via The Lancet;)
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