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00:00I've got a brand new tool for you, you cheeky monkey. So Gatsby is a tool that's now on my
00:05radar because it says it's going to elevate my research papers with Gatsby, Advanced AI for
00:11Academic Writing. Now, this is going to ruffle some feathers because this is the first AI tool
00:17that I've tested that offers writing of full academic papers from your data. So we'll be
00:24checking that out in a minute. And let me just tell you that it's got some good bits and some
00:29bad bits. But overall, I'm very impressed with it. And I think you will be too. So when you head
00:35over to Gatsby, this is what it looks like. But ultimately, the one thing that I think is really
00:40important is that we download Gatsby to our actual desktop or laptop. Now, I like that because then
00:48we don't have to worry about this weird like web interface that sometimes with other AI tools ends
00:53up crashing. There is a web version, which is in beta. And you can actually use a free live demo.
01:00But be careful because if you use the free demo version, they can actually keep your data. So
01:06if data security is important to you, don't use the free trial version, make sure that you actually
01:11pay for it. And then you get a few more protections about data being deleted and that sort of stuff.
01:16Now, let's get straight into it. So Gatsby looks like this when you download it onto your computer.
01:21And you've got this very simple interface, Gatsby Innovator. You click here, you've got Innovator,
01:27Writer, and Reviewer. So Innovator, generate novel ideas. Gatsby Writer, write based on your prior
01:33research. And then Gatsby Reviewer, write literature reviews and meta-analysis. So those are the things
01:38that AI excels at. And this is specifically for academics. So does it do better than something like
01:44ChatGPT or even Manus AI and those sort of tools that I really like? So this is what happens when
01:51you go to Innovator. It says, hi, I'm Gatsby. Hello, Gatsby. I can assist you with your technical
01:56innovation. And then when you sort of sign up, you get this. So let me show you, you get to put in
02:02your sort of like research interest. So here I've put OPV devices, nanocomposite electrodes and
02:07transparent electrodes. Here is where you can put as many sort of things that make sense for your
02:12research area. And then when you head over to Innovator, let's go to home, then these suggestions
02:19are based on the things you put in. Try to keep it nice and specific because in my experience,
02:24if you've got something like that's a little bit out of your field, it will try to squeeze it into
02:29this. And sometimes it doesn't make sense, but this is what it says. Okay. Profsky, integrated OPV,
02:34self-healing nanocomposite, graphene material. Yeah. So you can click on any one of these. And I did
02:39this earlier, so we don't have to wait. It does take a long time to generate these things and you'll see
02:44why. So I put in nanocomposite OPV devices. Then it said, okay, I understood that's what you mean,
02:50but it's not good enough for me. Gatsby said, all right, Gatsby, calm down, calm down. We're all
02:55here to have fun, aren't we? And there it says, here are some cutting edge research topics related
02:59to the system. Which one did I actually sort of like want to know about? And I clicked this one,
03:04the ternary blend nanocomposite, and then it went away and it did its analysis. So this is
03:08Innovator. Remember, this is coming up with new ideas. Let's see how well it did. Here we've got the
03:14primary analysis. So here it says, I'll start by analyzing the situation to pinpoint the main
03:18issue and explore potential solutions. Remember, this is quite a broad area. So I wasn't quite sure
03:24how it was going to do, but here we go. Primary analysis. This is all the stuff that it found.
03:29And it says here, look, this is the ternary blend nanocomposite used in, you know, typical devices.
03:36Then we've got critical subcomponents. So it really understands the sort of like field just from those
03:43very simple sort of like three words that I put in there. So it's obviously doing its deep research,
03:48which I love. And here we've got component analysis. So here are the components of OPV devices
03:54it thinks we could work with. We've got non-fullerene acceptors. And then this is the first time I've seen
03:59these sort of chemical equations in an AI tool that makes absolute sense for the topic that I'm
04:07researching. So here we can see that it's got even the CH3 plus NH3 plus three methyl ammonium. So it really
04:14has used the sort of like, I don't know, right formatting. It gives me confidence from the get go
04:19that this is going to be a cool tool. And then we've got alloys like acceptors and then functional
04:25analysis of OPV devices. And it goes through all of that. But ultimately, these are the things that it thinks
04:31I should be focusing on if I want to generate new research and publish that eventually. So here
04:37we've got asymmetric sidechain engineering for ternary third components. And then it's like
04:42recommendation. I like this. The idea is less practical in addressing the problems. It's given
04:47itself three stars out of five, but it has got these references down here up to nine. And we can copy
04:53all of this. So these are the ideas asymmetric sidechaining. And then we've got kinetically
04:58controlled ligand exchange. And then we've also got clustered sidechain for NFA ternary. And then we
05:04can expand this and ask it sort of like for more information, it will go away and do that.
05:09Ultimately, here now, it is sort of like creating a little bit of a paper introduction so that we can
05:16get an idea of all of the different sorts of, you know, topics that should be included in this idea.
05:24Now, you can see here that we've got awesome, actually really awesome, sort of like equations,
05:30which I really like. I've not seen anything like this before. And you'll see how well it does with
05:34that in a minute when we talk about actually just writing literature reviews and peer-reviewed papers.
05:40Oh, that one's a little bit controversial. Can you trust AI to write an entire peer-reviewed paper?
05:45We're about to find out. So another thing that Gatsby offers is this, the Gatsby Writer.
05:50And here it says, I can help you write a paper manuscript or a patent disclosure,
05:54which is very important, especially in my field, the material science world,
05:57where you want to protect your intellectual property and maybe become a millionaire from
06:02your ideas. It's never happened to me yet. Oh, sad face. All right then. So here you can input
06:08or attach your existing materials and it will write a paper. Now, I put in essentially a draft of a
06:15paper that I was working on many years ago. And this is what happened. So this is where I was
06:22pretty, pretty excited with what it created. Now, I actually put in my paper. So this is what I put
06:31in. It was a draft of a paper that I was writing. And I wanted to know, could it extract the information
06:36from the document I put in? And it only accepts Word documents up to five megabytes, which in my field
06:43isn't sort of enough to really put in a full paper. But if you've got some ideas in like a Word
06:48document, you can put it in here and then it will create an actual manuscript for you. So here you
06:53can see, okay, I've put that in and then before diving into writing your paper manuscript or pattern
06:58disclosure, I'll first summarize the research you've done so far. So based on the document I uploaded,
07:04this is what it says I did. And that's exactly what I did. So I was happy with that. And then I can
07:10click here and click research, word count how many words I want, and then write a paper manuscript
07:16based on that. So I can click write a paper manuscript. And this is what it generated. So
07:21this isn't, you know, real time, it took ages to create this. But ultimately, look, it says here,
07:27fabrication and optimization of that. It's got an abstract, which is pretty good. It's got an
07:32introduction, which is fully referenced and sort of like cited, which I really like. And you know,
07:39remember, we've just uploaded one Word document. And this is what it's created. And it is a pretty
07:45good first start as a peer reviewed paper. And this is the most controversial thing in academia
07:50at the moment, the done for you peer reviewed papers. And just by putting in a bit of information,
07:56you can get this first draft, which in my opinion, is actually not just a first draft,
08:01it is very, very detailed, you can see that not only does it sort of like go into silver based
08:06electrodes, and it's got different types of references here and how they're used. We got
08:12carbon nanotube based got hybrid electrodes here, you can see, you know, it's referenced
08:16these things. And then we've got fundamentals here, dispersibility. So it's got dispersibility
08:21basic, it goes really, really detailed and into the equations and into the kind of like,
08:28the interaction mechanisms and into all of the sort of like really fundamental things that you
08:34would like to see in a paper. But I think this maybe goes a little bit too deep for my field.
08:40But it's good to have the option of having those really sort of like granular bits of information
08:45in a paper. And then here, it's got enhanced dispersibility. So this is how I actually modified
08:52the single ward carbon nanotubes. Then it's got this bundle size distribution formula. And then here,
08:58it's got other things you can see it really, really goes from sort of basics. And then it's pulled
09:03out the figures that I use to create my paper in that paper draft. So here, it's saying patterned
09:10transparent electrodes on glass substrates. Well, no, that's not what it is. It's not on glass
09:15substrates. This was just free floating in acetone to see the structural stability. So yeah, that didn't
09:22really sort of work. But one thing it does do down here is give you the ability to know what should
09:27be in there. Now, this graph is wrong. It's just wrong. It just doesn't make sense. This chart,
09:34I don't know where it's got the information. But it at least tells me that I should be sort of like
09:39plotting sheet resistance against weight fractions. So I like the idea of using this as a tool to work
09:45out, you know, based on the current work you've done, what you should actually be including to create
09:51a full paper story. And that's what this is really doing for you is helping you sort of like determine
09:57what is a full complete story that you could tell about your research. So here, look, I don't know
10:02where I got this data. I just made it up. I really it's confusing. It's not right. But here we've got
10:07wavelength versus optical transmissants. So I should have, you know, the UV spectra in here, probably UV
10:14vis spectra, then it's got a nice kind of like equation. And I could see if that's useful for my
10:20research. Now we've got mechanical testing. So 10,000 bend cycles, which it needs it says like,
10:25you know, if you're going to include something like this, other papers have got bend cycles,
10:29you should include that. Then we've got time lapse stability in acetone flotation test that makes no
10:35sense. But ultimately, you know, this is the sort of story you should be telling in your paper. And
10:41it's done all of the sort of like hard work for you, where it's created an introduction is creating
10:47an abstract, it's got all the references, we've got, let's have a look, 38 references, which is
10:52great for a paper in my field. And they all exist. If you click here, it actually takes you out to the
10:58security check required. All right, all right. But yeah, you can click on those. And it takes you out
11:04to all of the really awesome places that you can get this information. Let's try another one just to
11:09make sure we don't get a security check. Here it is nanoscale. Here's the paper. So yeah, overall,
11:14I think this is really one of the first tools that allows you to get a full story of your research
11:23into a paper format. That is a great place to build off. So congratulations, Gatsby, you've done it.
11:32I think this is now the leading edge of paper writing for academics. Try it for your research.
11:39Let me know how good it is for your field because my suspicion is that it's not good all the time.
11:46Anyway, there's something else you need to know about this. The last thing Gatsby can help you
11:50with is reviewer. And this is where you get systematic literature reviews on any topic that
11:55you want. So here, when you click on the reviewer, it just says I can help you write a systematic
11:59literature review and a meta analysis if needed. Oh, thank you. Just enter your research topic below.
12:05So here you've got options. You can click meta analysis. You can say since a certain time,
12:10you can see it goes all the way back to 2000. You can leave those off and just put a research topic,
12:15which is what I did. And then this is what I ended up with. And it does take a while to generate,
12:20but it's easy because you just wait. You know, you just go grab yourself a cup of tea or something
12:24like that. So here, I wanted a literature review on nanocomposite transparent electrode materials.
12:29Then it says, we'll start by generating an outline. And then after you're happy with that,
12:33you click view, you know, create paper manuscript. So it creates kind of this outline. You think,
12:38oh yeah, you know, scan over it and be like, yeah, okay, I like that. And then, yeah, ultimately,
12:43then it creates this for you. So let's go all the way to the top. And it is very, very detailed and
12:50very, very advanced. One of the best literature reviews that I've seen generated specifically in
12:55sort of like the research AI tool world. This is it advances in nanocomposite transparent
13:01electrode materials. And it's got an introduction. It's all referenced as methodology.
13:07And here is the Prisma sort of flow diagram of all of the studies that it included. And the final
13:12review included 13 studies. So out of 2000 and something studies, it only chose 13. Now,
13:19am I happy about that? Not really. I feel like there are more sort of papers that if I was to do this
13:24manually that I'd find. I've done this literature review in the past and found many more than 13 papers.
13:29But ultimately, you can see here that's obvious because it says research trends. And then in
13:342019, it just found one paper. Now, I know that's not true. So it really didn't sort of like find the
13:42perfect papers. And it really didn't find all of the papers in this. But nonetheless, you know,
13:48I think it gives you a good structure of a literature review and fully referenced. And if we scrolled all
13:55the way down to the bottom, you can see that it found 31 references that included in the end,
14:00despite it saying it only used 13. Nonetheless, I think this would be a good start for you. I think
14:05other tools do research literature reviews better at the moment. But if you've paid for this, and
14:13you've got it, if I was to start a new research, you know, field, I would use this if I've already got
14:19access to it for the writer, which I feel like is probably the most powerful tool that this is
14:24offering at the moment. And the good thing is, is once you've created something like this, you know,
14:29the manuscript, you can go in and it gives you other options like humanizing. So here you can say
14:35humanize, reduce AI detection likelihood. And that's where you use these credits up here.
14:40Or you can export it to Markdown, Latex, MS Word, all of the places where you would want to actually
14:45sort of like start working with this. You don't have to just use it in the format it's giving you
14:51in the, you know, the tool or the web interface. It is completely exportable, which I love. So Gatsby,
14:57oh, it's exciting times, isn't it? This is the first most controversial area, which is paper writing
15:04done for you. Oh, watch this space. If you like this video, go check out this one where I talk about
15:10how Illicit just got awesome and can write literature reviews for you. Go check it out.
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