AI for Auto-Research: Roadmap & User Guide
Lingdong Kong, Xian Sun, Wei Chow, Linfeng Li, Kevin Qinghong Lin, Xuan Billy Zhang, Song Wang, Rong Li, Qing Wu, Wei Gao, Yingshuo Wang, Shaoyuan Xie, Jiachen Liu, Leigang Qu, Shijie Li, Lai Xing Ng, Benoit R. Cottereau, Ziwei Liu, Tat-Seng Chua, Wei Tsang Ooi

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of AI's role across the entire research lifecycle, highlighting its strengths, limitations, and the importance of human oversight in scientific research.
Contribution
It offers a detailed taxonomy, benchmark suite, and practical guidelines for deploying AI responsibly in research workflows.
Findings
AI excels at structured, retrieval-based tasks
AI remains fragile for novel ideas and scientific judgment
Human oversight is crucial for reliable research outcomes
Abstract
AI-assisted research is crossing a threshold: fully automated systems can now generate research papers for as little as $15, while long-horizon agents can execute experiments, draft manuscripts, and simulate critique with minimal human input. Yet this productivity frontier exposes a deeper integrity problem: under scientific pressure, even frontier LLMs still fabricate results, miss hidden errors, and fail to judge novelty reliably. Studying developments through April 2026, we present an end-to-end analysis of AI across the complete research lifecycle, organized into four epistemological phases: Creation (idea generation, literature review, coding & experiments, tables & figures), Writing (paper writing), Validation (peer review, rebuttal & revision), and Dissemination (posters, slides, videos, social media, project pages, and interactive agents). We identify a sharp, stage-dependent…
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