Last week I had to read a paper before a group meeting and did the thing I’ve been doing way too often lately. Dropped the PDF into an AI tool, read the summary, skimmed the key points, and decided I basically had it. Then the next afternoon someone asked why the authors used that method instead of the more obvious one. I had nothing lol. I remembered the conclusion. I remembered two of the results. But I couldn’t explain the path they took to get there without reopening the paper. That annoyed me enough that I went back and read the same paper again more slowly. I had found Paper2Gal while looking around for paper-reading tools, so I tried it with the PDF. The visual novel format is kind of goofy, not gonna lie, but the useful part was that it moved through the paper section by section instead of just handing me the final answer. I still kept the original PDF open. A couple explanations sounded a little too clean, so I checked the actual paragraphs myself. It was definitely slower than reading a summary. But later, I could actually remember why the methods section mattered and which part of the results I still wasn’t fully convinced by. I think I’ve been using AI summaries to skip the exact part of reading that makes something stick. Turns out “knowing what the paper concluded” and actually understanding the paper are annoyingly different things. submitted by /u/Impressive-Prune6339
Originally posted by u/Impressive-Prune6339 on r/ArtificialInteligence
