AI Tools

AI Tools: Training residents to use AI responsibly

Training residents to use AI responsibly 1 Define the task:Training residents to use 2 Use AI on auditablesteps 3 Verify against sourcepapers 4 Disclose the roleclearly
Graphical abstract

Editorial guidance on training residents to use ai responsibly for authors and editors—aligned with open-access publishing standards and verified international references.

Why this matters now

Training residents to use AI responsibly is a recurring question for authors, editors, and research offices working with Lumora journals and partner institutions. As submission volumes grow across the GCC, clarity on this topic reduces desk returns, shortens revision cycles, and protects readers from incomplete or misleading claims.

This editorial note summarizes practices aligned with international guidance (Elicit, Scite, NIH — AI in biomedical research, COPE — Authorship and AI tools, ICMJE Recommendations) and with Lumora's open-access, double-blind review model. It is intended as practical orientation—not a substitute for journal-specific author guidelines or institutional policy.

What experienced teams do differently

Strong research groups treat training residents to use ai responsibly as a workflow step with named responsibility, not an afterthought. They document decisions, keep evidence in shared folders, and align co-authors before submission so that metadata, ethics statements, and references match the final manuscript.

For editors, the same topic informs triage: incomplete handling of ai tools issues is one of the most common reasons manuscripts return for administrative revision before peer review begins.

Responsible AI-use emphasis Human verification Disclosure Tool selection Reference checking
Conceptual emphasis chart: relative attention across ai tools activities — qualitative weights, not measured data.

Checklist you can use this week

1) Read the primary sources linked below and note requirements that apply to your study design. 2) Compare your draft against Lumora author guidelines and the target journal scope. 3) Confirm authorship, conflicts, funding, and ethics documentation with every co-author. 4) If AI tools assisted screening, translation, or drafting, disclose the role in the cover letter and methods as appropriate.

5) Before submission, verify that every reference resolves (DOI, PMID, or stable URL) and supports the sentence it accompanies—fabricated or mismatched citations are a frequent integrity finding.

Regional perspective

Saudi and GCC institutions increasingly expect publishable research to be discoverable, ethically documented, and relevant to local practice where applicable. Training residents to use AI responsibly supports that expectation when teams invest early rather than at the proof stage.

Lumora Editorial Office editors see the best outcomes when corresponding authors respond promptly to clarification requests and when institutions provide library or research-office support for metadata, identifiers, and reference management.

References

  1. Elicit. Elicit. Accessed 30 Nov 2026.
  2. Scite. Scite. Accessed 30 Nov 2026.
  3. NIH. NIH — AI in biomedical research. Accessed 30 Nov 2026.
  4. COPE. COPE — Authorship and AI tools. Accessed 30 Nov 2026.
  5. ICMJE. ICMJE Recommendations. Accessed 30 Nov 2026.
Build with clarity

Need a stronger publishing workflow?

Lumora helps journals, editors, and research teams build ethical, discoverable, AI-aware publishing systems.

Related reading