Proceedings of the 2nd AAAI Bridge on Artificial Intelligence for Scholarly Communication

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52825/ocp.v8i.3212

Keywords:

Artificial Intelligence, Scholarly Communication, AI for Scholarly Communication

Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) has become a key enabler in scholarly communication, supporting researchers across disciplines. The 2nd AAAI Bridge on Artificial Intelligence for Scholarly Communication (AI4SC) aims to bring together researchers from all disciplines who develop or use AI technologies in their work to share their methods, approaches, experiences, identify common problems, facilitate collaboration and define future research directions. During this edition, five papers were accepted and published by TIB Open Publishing. We present an overview and brief summary of the accepted submissions.

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References

[1] A. Jiomekong, H. K. McGinty, K. G. Mills, A. Oelen, E. Rajabi, H. McElroy, A. Christou, A. Saini, J. A. Zebaze, H. Kim, and A. M. Jacyszyn, “Charting the future of scholarly knowledge with ai: A community perspective,” arXiv preprint arXiv:2509.02581, 2025. DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2509.02581.

[2] F. Bolanos, A. Salatino, F. Osborne, and E. Motta, Artificial intelligence for literature reviews: Opportunities and challenges, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.08565.

[3] S. Szeider, “Unmediated ai-assisted scholarly citations,” in Proceeding of the 2nd AAAI Bridge on Artificial Intelligence for Scholarly Communication, TIB Open Publishing, Dec. 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.52825/ocp.v8i/3161.

[4] B. Chand, S. Tiwari, N. Mihindukulasooriya, and S. Auer, “Synergistic ai agents - integrating knowledge graphs and large language models for scholarly communication,” in Proceeding of the 2nd AAAI Bridge on Artificial Intelligence for Scholarly Communication, TIB Open Publishing, Dec. 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.52825/ocp.v8i/3172.

[5] A. S. Dalal and H. McGinty, “Echo-llm: Evidence-checked hierarchical ontology,” in Proceeding of the 2nd AAAI Bridge on Artificial Intelligence for Scholarly Communication, TIB Open Publishing, Dec. 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.52825/ocp.v8i/3173.

[6] A. Ellerm, B. Adams, and M. Gahegan, “Trustworthy scientific narrative generation through computational provenance and dynamic authoring frameworks,” in Proceeding of the 2nd AAAI Bridge on Artificial Intelligence for Scholarly Communication, TIB Open Publishing, Dec. 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.52825/ocp.v8i/3174.

[7] N. Lamba, S. Tiwari, and M. Gaur, “Hallucinations in scholarly llms: A conceptual overview and practical implications,” in Proceeding of the 2nd AAAI Bridge on Artificial Intelligence for Scholarly Communication, TIB Open Publishing, Dec. 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.52825/ocp.v8i/3175.

[8] S. Auer, A. Oelen, M. Y. Jaradeh, M. Khalid, F. Keya, S. K. Gaddipati, J. D’Souza, L. Schluter, A. Alasti, G. Rabby, A. Jiomekong, and O. Karras, “Towards ai-supported research: A vision of the tib aissistant,” in Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Scientific Knowledge: Representation, Discovery, and Assessment (Sci-K), Nov. 2025.

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Published

2025-12-18

How to Cite

Auer, S., Betz, D., Biniossek, C., Jacyszyn, A., Jiomekong, A., Kim, H., … Rajabi, E. (2025). Proceedings of the 2nd AAAI Bridge on Artificial Intelligence for Scholarly Communication. Open Conference Proceedings, 8. https://doi.org/10.52825/ocp.v8i.3212