Les images générées par l’IA sont plus convaincantes que jamais, s’infiltrant dans les revues scientifiques et sapant la confiance dans la science

in Opinion

Can you distinguish between a scientific image created by a human and one generated by an AI model? (Image credit: Jesussanz/Getty Images)

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A photograph of our planet Earth illuminated in the vastness of space, with the moon’s rugged edge extending across its foreground, captured the attention of many in April 2026. Spacefarers on NASA’s Artemis II expedition took the picture, and much like the iconic “Earthrise” image from Apollo 8, it resonated as profoundly genuine and inspiring to numerous individuals.

However, in an era where virtually anyone can produce a visually comparable image within moments using artificial intelligence from a simple text description, how do people determine an image’s authenticity?

AI-generated imagery infiltrates science

NEJM Images in Clincal Medicine from last week retracted due to AI image manipulation. Look at the numbers on the ruler🤦🏻‍♂️https://t.co/lafNw15Kao pic.twitter.com/c66u5ZX8PkMay 2, 2026

Trust in scientific imagery

This depiction of Earth, captured during the Artemis II mission in April 2026, is indeed authentic. But does everyone perceive it as such?

(Image credit: NASA)

Transparency, not restriction

Why authentic visuals retain their impact

Sourse: www.livescience.com

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