Another good review of Generative AI for Academics, this time from the data scientist Bruno Gonçalves. Very interesting to see how this has been received from a more technical perspective:
Mark Carrigan’s “Generative AI for Academics“ is a brisk, sensible map for using LLMs in scholarly life. It avoids both hype and doom, treating generative AI as a set of tools that demand judgment, not blind adoption. The tone is practical and reflective—ideal for faculty, PIs, and grad students who need shared language and guardrails.
The book shines in how it organizes academic work (Thinking, Collaborating, Communicating, Engaging), then pairs each with concrete practices (rubber-ducking, draft refinement, critical oversight). It isn’t a prompt cookbook or a windy manifesto; it’s a clear framework for responsible use, culture-setting, and policy discussions in departments and labs.
