ASKing Smarter Questions: When Scholarly Search Learns to Explain Itself
Search used to be a polite negotiation with a database. You typed keywords. The system returned papers. You inspected titles, opened tabs, skimmed abstracts, cursed quietly, adjusted the keywords, and repeated the ritual until either the literature became clear or your soul left the building. Large language models changed the ritual, but not always for the better. Now a system can answer a research question directly, which feels magical until one remembers that “fluent” and “correct” are not synonyms. In scholarly work, this distinction is not academic decoration. It is the difference between literature discovery and very confident misinformation wearing a lab coat. ...