AI tools like ChatGPT can help with research and writing papers. If you use information from ChatGPT in a paper, you need to cite it properly, even though it’s not a usual source or personal communication. Here is how to cite AI in APA 7.
With AI tools becoming more common, it is important to know the right way to cite them in APA. This guide shows you how to cite ChatGPT and other AI chatbots in APA for both in-text citations and reference lists.
How do you cite AI and ChatGPT in APA?
Artificial intelligence (AI) is computer programming that copies how people act. Students can ask AI chatbots, like ChatGPT, research questions. For example, they can ask for examples or text summaries. These AI tools usually give correct answers in a conversational way.
When using AI information in a research paper, it needs to be cited like other sources. The citation style depends on whether you are using APA, MLA, or Chicago format. This explanation focuses on the APA Seventh Edition.
Citing AI in APA is different because AI is not a book or website. AI chats are “non-retrievable data,” meaning others can’t access the chat to check your source.
Non-retrievable data is usually cited as “personal communication” in APA. But the APA Style Blog says that with AI, “there is no person communicating.”
Instead, APA suggests citing AI as an “algorithm’s output.” This means you credit the company that made the AI. Include a full citation in the reference list with the AI name, date accessed, and other details. For in-text citations, use the company name and the year accessed.
When should you cite your sources?
When writing a paper, you need to give credit for every new idea that isn’t your own. Each fact or data point from your research must have its own citation, even if you don’t quote it directly. This helps others check that your information is accurate.
How to cite an AI-generated text in APA
When using AI like ChatGPT for research papers, it’s important to cite it properly in APA format. Here’s a simple guide on how to do that:
When to Cite Sources
Whenever you include new ideas, facts, or data that aren’t your own, you need to cite them. This helps others verify your information.
In-Text Citations:
For in-text citations in APA format, use the company name and the year you accessed the AI information.
– Example: A common example of alliteration is “Peter picked a peck of pickled peppers” (OpenAI, 2023).
If you mention the company’s name in the text, just include the year:
– Example: ChatGPT from OpenAI provided the example “Peter picked a peck of pickled peppers” (2023).
Full Citation in Reference List:
In the reference list, provide a full citation following this format:
– Company. (Year). AI Name (version) [Descriptor]. URL
For ChatGPT, the citation looks like this:
– OpenAI. (2023). ChatGPT (Mar 14 version) [Large language model]. https://chat.openai.com/chat
Additional Tips
1. Explain the Prompt: Briefly explain the prompt you used to get the information from the AI. This helps readers understand how you got your data.
– Example: When asked to summarize Nagel’s essay, OpenAI’s ChatGPT described it as an argument that “it is impossible for humans to fully understand the subjective experience of other beings, particularly animals” (2023).
2. Include a Transcript in Appendices: If the AI chat had a big influence on your research, include the entire chat in the appendices and mention it in your text.
– Example: An example of convergent evolution is the independent development of winged flight in both birds and bats (OpenAI, 2023; see Appendix B for the full transcript).
How to Cite ChatGPT and AI in APA Format
Matt Ellis
Matt Ellis
Updated on July 6, 2023 · Students
Among its many uses, AI like ChatGPT can be a valuable research tool for papers and other academic writing. But if you’re using its information in a paper that follows APA or another citation style, you still have to cite it like any other source. However, since AI is neither a standard source nor personal communication, how do you cite AI in APA 7?
With the increasing popularity of AI and ChatGPT, we wanted to explain their proper citation guidelines in APA format. In this guide, we cover how to reference ChatGPT (and other AI chatbots) in APA for both in-text citations and the references list. We even share some APA citation examples you can use as templates.
How do you cite AI and ChatGPT in APA?
AI (artificial intelligence) is machine programming that simulates human behavior—in other words, simulates human behavior. For academic writing, students can ask research questions to AI chatbots like ChatGPT. For example, they can ask them to generate examples or summarize text. These AI programs provide (usually) correct answers in a conversational response.
If information from an AI chat is used for a research paper, it needs to be cited just like other sources. How to write the source citations depends on the style you’re using: APA format, MLA format, or Chicago format. Each style has its own rules, but this article focuses only on the APA Seventh Edition, the most recent.
The question is: How do you cite AI in APA? AI is not a book or even a website. Furthermore, chats in AI may be “non-retrievable data,” which means other people can’t access the chat to verify your source.
Usually, non-retrievable data is cited as “personal communication” in APA, but according to the APA Style Blog, “. . . with [AI]-generated text there is no person communicating.”
Instead, APA suggests citing AI as an “algorithm’s output,” which means crediting the author of the algorithm (i.e., the company that built the AI). You put a full citation with the AI name, date accessed, and other information in the reference list; for in-text parenthetical citations, you use the company name and year accessed. We share full details and give citation examples below.
When should you cite your sources?
Whether you’re using AI or any other source, you need a citation for each new idea in your paper that’s not your own. Every fact or piece of data from your research needs its own individual citation, even when it’s not a direct quote. That’s how others can verify that your information is correct.
APA format uses an author-date citation system for in-text citations. Directly after a sentence or clause that uses AI research—but before the punctuation mark—put a parenthetical citation with the company that created the AI and the year you accessed it.
A common example of alliteration is the child’s tongue twister “Peter picked a peck of pickled peppers” (OpenAI, 2023).
If you reference the company’s name directly in the text, you need to add only the year. These are known as narrative citations.
A common example of alliteration, generated by ChatGPT from OpenAI, is the child’s tongue twister “Peter picked a peck of pickled peppers” (2023).
APA also requires a full citation in the reference list at the end of the paper, which we explain below.
How do you cite AI-generated text in APA?
To cite AI-generated text for in-text parenthetical citations, place the company’s name and the year you accessed the information, separated by a comma, within parentheses after the related sentence or clause. Make sure to place the final punctuation mark after the citation.
(Company, Year)
(OpenAI, 2023)
If the company name is mentioned in the text, include only the year. (2023)
For a full citation in the reference list, follow the formula below used for other algorithm-generated information. Pay close attention to punctuation, such as periods, parentheses, and brackets, and where you put them.
Company. (Year). AI Name (version) [Descriptor]. URL
OpenAI. (2023). ChatGPT (Mar 14 version) [Large language model]. https://chat.openai.com/chat
The “descriptor” is just a quick description APA uses for all nonstandard sources—traditional sources like books or online articles don’t need them. You can write the descriptor in your own words, but feel free to use “Large language model” for ChatGPT-4.
Keep in mind there are two important guidelines to consider when citing AI-generated text in formal writing:
Briefly explain the prompt so readers know how you accessed your information.
If the chat is particularly relevant to your paper, include a transcript in the appendices.
First, because conversations with AI chatbots are open-ended, it helps your reader to explain what you said or how you accessed the information you’re citing. This can be done briefly, sparing some details, directly in the writing.
When asked to summarize Nagel’s essay, OpenAI’s ChatGPT described it as an argument that “it is impossible for humans to fully understand the subjective experience of other beings, particularly animals” (2023).
Second, if an AI chat had a big influence on your research, it’s best to copy and paste the entire conversation in an appendix at the end of the paper. After all, AI chatbots generate unique dialogue almost every time, even if the prompts are the same, so you want to include a record of your specific chat.
The appendices section is for exactly this kind of information, and some readers will want to see both your and the AI’s exact words. If you include the transcript in an appendix, you should mention it at least once within the text, specifically in an in-text citation.
An example of convergent evolution is the independent development of winged flight in both birds and bats (OpenAI, 2023; See Appendix B for the full transcript).
How do you cite an AI image?
Citing an AI image in APA follows mostly the same rules as how to cite an image in APA, with the addition of mentioning the prompt and AI tool in the caption note. When placing the image in text, use this formula:
How do you cite AI in APA 7?
In APA 7, you cite AI sources as you would an algorithm’s output, with both parenthetical citations in the text and full citations in the reference list. Use the company that built the AI as the author and the name of the AI as the title, as well as the year you accessed the AI chat. For example, an in-text citation for ChatGPT would appear as “(OpenAI, 2023).”
The academic Hive webpage offers top-notch tools for student and researcher success. We also offer Consultancy Services; book a session today.