Thamburaj Anthuvan (S.B.Patil Institute Management) et al. have posted “Human-AI Collaboration in Academic Writing: A Narrative Review and the Scholarly HI-AI Loop Framework for Ethical Knowledge Production” on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This narrative literature review explores the evolving intersection of human and machine collaboration in academic writing, with a focus on literature summarization as a critical site of transformation. Synthesizing findings from 38 peer-reviewed studies published between 2020 and 2025, it examines the emergence of hybrid workflows where machine-generated drafts are refined, contextualized, and ethically validated by human scholars. The review identifies four core themes-tool capabilities, editorial oversight, ethical disclosure, and institutional readiness-that shape current practices and highlight unresolved tensions around authorship, transparency, and scholarly responsibility. Building on this synthesis, the paper introduces the Scholarly HI-AI Loop, a seven-stage framework that reimagines literature review as a co-productive and ethically accountable process. Unlike tool-centric audits, this framework offers a normative roadmap for integrating automation without compromising academic integrity. It positions human scholars not as passive reviewers, but as epistemic anchors who shape meaning, ensure accuracy, and safeguard ethical standards. The review offers actionable guidance for researchers, editors, institutions, and developers seeking to navigate this transition responsibly. By grounding its insights in both empirical patterns and conceptual analysis, the paper contributes to a growing conversation on how academic knowledge production can adapt-without eroding-its foundational values in the age of machine assistance.
