RFK Jr's "Make America Healthy Again" Report Cites Studies That Don't Exist, in Clear Sign of AI Generated Slop
Briefly

The report released by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been criticized for its reliance on discredited sources and questionable claims about public health. An investigation by NOTUS revealed that out of over 500 cited studies, several do not exist, and many citations are erroneous or misrepresent conclusions. Epidemiologist Katherine Keyes pointed out that a purported study she was cited in is entirely fictitious. The report raises serious concerns over the credibility of its findings and the possible involvement of generative AI in its compilation.
The report, criticized for dubious assertions about Americans' health issues, relies on questionable sources and potentially misuses generative AI, raising concerns over credibility.
Of the over 500 studies and sources cited in the MAHA report, at least seven do not exist, illuminating issues with citations and academic integrity.
Epidemiologist Katherine Keyes commented on a fictitious study she was cited in, stating, 'The paper cited is not a real paper that I or my colleagues were involved with.'
There are numerous examples of AI-generated hallucinations leading to citations of non-existent studies, casting doubt on the accuracy and reliability of the MAHA Commission report.
Read at Futurism
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