PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

AI produces shallower knowledge than web search

2025-10-28
(Press-News.org) Learning about a topic by interacting with AI chatbots like ChatGPT rather than following links provided by web search can produce shallower knowledge. Advice given on the basis of this shallow knowledge tends to be sparser, less original, and less likely to be adopted by others. Shiri Melumad and Jin Ho Yun conducted seven experiments with thousands of online participants who were randomly assigned to learn about various topics, including how to plant a vegetable garden, how to lead a healthier lifestyle, or how to cope with financial scams, using either large language models (LLMs) or traditional Google web search links. Participants then wrote advice based on what they learned. Participants who used LLMs spent less time engaging with search results and reported developing shallower knowledge compared to those using web links, even when the underlying facts were identical. When forming advice, LLM users invested less effort and produced content that was objectively shorter, contained fewer factual references, and showed greater similarity to other participants' advice. In an experiment with 1,501 independent evaluators, recipients—who were unaware of where the advice came from—rated advice written after LLM searches as less helpful, less informative, and less trustworthy compared to advice based on web search, and were less willing to adopt the LLM-derived advice. While LLMs are undeniably efficient, relying on pre-synthesized summaries can transform learning from an active quest to a passive activity. According to the authors, LLMs are thus potentially less useful than web search if the goal is developing procedural knowledge—an understanding of how to actually do things.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New study shows global decline in parental trust in childhood vaccines after COVID-19, contributing to increased measles outbreaks

2025-10-28
October 28, 2025 — An international study led by the Azrieli Faculty of Medicine in the Galilee at Bar-Ilan University reveals that the COVID-19 pandemic has contributed to a diminishing public trust in childhood vaccines, resulting in declining vaccination rates and a resurgence of preventable, life-threatening diseases such as measles. The findings come amid one of the most severe measles outbreaks in Israel in decades, with thousands of infections and multiple child deaths reported nationwide. Published in the peer-reviewed journal Vaccine, the study surveyed 2,047 parents with children born both before and after the pandemic ...

BD² awards $18 million in grants to advance research on the biology of bipolar disorder

2025-10-28
Washington, D.C. – Today, BD², or Breakthrough Discoveries for thriving with Bipolar Disorder, announced its third round of Discovery Research grants, totaling nearly $18 million – expanding a comprehensive global effort to examine the key mechanisms of bipolar disorder.  Multidisciplinary teams of scientists and clinicians include leads from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Mass General Brigham, Weill Cornell Medicine, and the University of Minnesota. These teams represent a unique cohort of successful Discovery Grantees, as they will all use neuromodulation to explore human neural circuitry in bipolar disorder. These teams will each ...

Opt-out organ donation policies might reduce organ supply

2025-10-28
Every day, 17 Americans die while waiting for an organ transplant. Opt-out organ donation policies, which enroll everyone into post-mortem donation programs by default unless people choose to opt out, have been touted as a way to increase the supply of desperately needed organs. But opt-out organ donation policies may reduce living organ donations, leaving systems no better supplied with lifesaving organs. Pascal Güntürkün and colleagues analyzed epidemiological data from 24 countries between 2000–2023 and conducted four experimental ...

Message from the oldest-living dogs to dogs and men: Gonad function fights frailty

2025-10-28
West Lafayette, Ind. – Frailty threatens older individuals because it increases their vulnerability to detrimental health outcomes, such as falling, longer hospitalization, or even shortened life expectancy.  New research exploring the linkage between frailty and mortality risk points to retaining gonad function as a potent strategy to fight late-life frailty. The study conducted by scientists at the Gerald P. Murphy Cancer Foundation’s Center for Exceptional Longevity Studies was published last week in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Scientific Reports. The ...

Distinct brain features in football players may tell who is at risk of long-term traumatic disease

2025-10-28
Brain scans from American football players reveal subtle differences in the brain’s outer grooves when compared to scans from otherwise healthy men who never played contact or collision sports, a new study shows. Its authors say the findings could potentially predict which people are more at risk of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). Like many neurodegenerative diseases, CTE is known to worsen over time, and it afflicts many who play contact and collision sports that involve repeated hits to the head. Popular contact sports include soccer and basketball, while common collision sports are ...

Identifying safer implant designs for total hip replacement

2025-10-28
As populations continue to age, total hip replacement (THR) is becoming an increasingly common surgical procedure. Experts estimate that approximately one million THRs are performed each year worldwide. The surgery is often life-changing, as it can fully restore the function of the hip joint, reduce pain, and allow patients to walk and bear weight again. However, as with any major surgery, the procedure is not without risks, especially for older individuals with other health conditions.   A significant complication following THR is a femoral fracture—a break in the thigh bone near the artificial hip joint. This ...

Study reveals clinical frailty scale as a quick predictor of patient risk after heart failure administration

2025-10-28
Frailty is closely linked to adverse outcomes in older adults, particularly those with heart failure. Numerous epidemiologic studies show that frailty has important prognostic value in this population, underscoring the need for routine assessment. At the same time, the concept of frailty has expanded beyond the physical domain to include cognitive and other dimensions, making comprehensive evaluation increasingly complex and less feasible in everyday practice. The Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) offers a practical alternative: a 9-point, bedside, visually assessed tool that can be completed in minutes. However, key questions remain—how closely ...

Game-changing heat shield to revolutionize aerospace manufacturing with long-life engines

2025-10-28
Aerospace industry has undergone tremendous developments over the last century, with materials science engineers playing a significant role in this transformation. It is well known that as the operating temperature of metallic materials increases, the speed of aircraft can be enhanced and fuel consumption can be reduced. Therefore, research on high-temperature materials has been directly linked to the improvement of aircraft performance and has been actively conducted worldwide since the 1940s. For more than 80 years, Ni-based alloys have been the primary materials used for high-temperature applications. To enable their use at even higher temperatures, ...

Pusan National University researchers show how AI can help in fashion trend prediction

2025-10-28
Fashion trend forecasting helps companies predict which clothes will be popular in upcoming seasons. Traditionally, this has relied on experts’ intuition, experience and creativity. More recently, big-data analysis has been incorporated, offering deeper insights into consumer behavior. However, such methods pose technical barriers and remain out of reach for fashion students or small brands. Recent developments in artificial intelligence (AI) can balance the scales. Large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT have made big data analysis readily available to the public.  LLMs draw ...

Sinking Indian megacities pose 'alarming' building damage risks

2025-10-28
Sinking land is quietly destabilizing urban infrastructure in India’s largest cities, putting thousands of buildings and millions of people at risk, according to Virginia Tech scientists. Groundwater overuse is a critical driver of the problem, said Susanna Werth, assistant professor of geosciences who co-authored the paper published Oct. 28 in Nature Sustainability. “When cities pump more water from aquifers than nature can replenish, the ground quite literally sinks,” Werth said. “Our study shows that this overexploitation ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

“Proton‑iodine” regulation of protonated polyaniline catalyst for high‑performance electrolytic Zn‑I2 batteries

Directional three‑dimensional macroporous carbon foams decorated with WC1−x nanoparticles derived from salting‑out protein assemblies for highly effective electromagnetic absorption

Tropical Australian study sets new standard for Indigenous-led research

Invitation to co-edit a special issue on intelligent additive manufacturing

Success in measuring nano droplets, a new breakthrough in hydrogen, semiconductor, and battery research​

Shopping for two is stressful

Micro/nano‑reconfigurable robots for intelligent carbon management in confined‑space life‑support systems

Long-term antidepressant use surges in Australia, sparking warnings of overprescribing

To bop or to sway? The music will tell you

Neural network helps detect gunshots from illegal rainforest poaching

New evidence questions the benefit of calcium supplements in pregnancy for preventing pre-eclampsia

A molecular ‘reset button’ for reading the brain through a blood test

Why do some lung transplant patients face higher rejection risk?

New study offers a glimpse into 230,000 years of climate and landscape shifts in the Southwest

Gender-specific supportive environment key to cutting female athletes’ injury risks

Overreliance on AI risks eroding new and future doctors’ critical thinking while reinforcing existing bias

Eating disorders in mums-to-be linked to heightened risk of asthma and wheezing in their kids

Global study backs mandatory strength warm-ups for female athletes

Global analysis: Nearly one in five child deaths linked to growth failure

Flood risks in delta cities are increasing, study finds

New strategic support for UK clean industry with £2 million funding boost

Night workers face inequalities in pay, health, safety and dignity

Black carbon from wheat straw burning shown to curb antibiotic resistance spread in farmlands with plastic mulch residues

SCAI and CRT announce partnership to advance interventional cardiology education, advocacy, and research

Mindfulness may help people disconnect from their smartphones

Event aims to unpack chaos caused by AI slop

Tracking forever chemicals across food web shows not all isomers are distributed equally

November research news from the Ecological Society of America

Study provides comprehensive insights into DNA language models

UC Irvine-led study uses social media for real-time monitoring of heat experiences in state

[Press-News.org] AI produces shallower knowledge than web search