Attribution: with thanks to the McMaster University Libraries whose work informed the creation of this page. Please see their excellent guide on citing AI:
You should always make it clear to your reader which ideas are your own and which are paraphrased or quoted from other sources, and that includes generative AI. With traditional sources, you provided the publication information so that readers could theoretically find that sources themselves and read it. With AI sources, you rarely get exactly the same results twice, so the goal is to provide enough information so that your readers know where and how the content was generated.
If you use an AI tool in a functional way, for example to edit or translate your own words, you should mention that prominently in the text. If you are conducting research, the Methods section is good place. For most other essays, an acknowledgment in the introduction would be appropriate. The University of Exeter has some examples of statements you could cite or adapt for this purpose.
Additionally, some generative AI tools will provide citations with their content. Be very cautious of these! AI tools are known to "hallucinate" or invent citations that are not real. They also sometimes get the details wrong even if they are citing something real. Bing AI provides links to the sources it cites, so it is easy to check that they are real and that the AI tool is accurately representing the information found there.
The MLA Style blog has these recommendations for citing Generative AI:
Works Cited example:
“Describe the symbolism of the green light in the book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald” prompt. ChatGPT, 13 Feb. version, OpenAI, 8 Mar. 2023, chat.openai.com/chat.
Image caption example:
Fig. 1. “Pointillist painting of a sheep in a sunny field of blue flowers” prompt, Bing Image Creator DALL-E, version 2, OpenAI, 8 Mar. 2023, labs.openai.com/.
Creative text example:
“Upon the shore . . .” Shakespearean sonnet about seeing the ocean. ChatGPT, 13 Feb. version, OpenAI, 8 Mar. 2023, chat.openai.com/chat.
The APA Style guide treats content created by generative AI like the output of an algorithm rather than that of a personal communication (i.e. an email). Always identify large language models as such in brackets after the version information.
Works Cited example:
OpenAI. (2023). ChatGPT (13 Feb. version) [Large Language Model]. chat.openai.com/chat.
Image caption suggestion (APA has not issued an specific guidance on citing AI generate images):
Fig. 1. Image generated using the prompt "Pointillist painting of a sheep in a sunny field of blue flowers," by OpenAI, Bing Image Creator, 2023 (labs.openai.com/).
Image Works Cited suggestion:
OpenAI. (2023). Bing Image Creator (DALL-E 2) [AI image generator]. labs.openai.com/.
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