Rethinking Research: The Role of Humans in Scientific Discovery in the Age of LLMs*
Professor Sir Bashir M. Al-Hashimi CBE FREng FRS, Vice-President (Research & Innovation) and ARM Professor of Computer Engineering at King's College London
Wednesday 4th February | 16:00-18:00 | LT229 & Level 2 Concourse, Blackett Building | South Kensington Campus
Please note that from 17:00-18:00 a drinks reception will be held on the Level 2 Concourse, Blackett Building, SK Campus
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Artificial intelligence (AI) and large language models (LLMs) are rapidly reshaping the landscape of scientific discovery. These technologies highlight the significant potential of AI to enhance human scientific capabilities and accelerate research. At the same time, they signal a profound shift in how research is conceived, conducted, and communicated, as well as how doctoral students and researchers are supervised and intellectually developed. This transformation calls for a critical re-examination of the human role in research.
The relationship between humans and AI, and their combined biological and artificial intelligence, must be grounded in mutual critique, trust, and collaboration. Researchers should rigorously evaluate AI-generated outputs using their own expertise and judgment, while also leveraging LLMs to test, challenge, and refine arguments and hypotheses through critical thinking. Such reciprocal co-creation ensures that AI functions as an augmentative partner rather than a replacement in the pursuit of scientific knowledge. It also points toward a shift from a traditional two-way relationship to a three-way partnership involving students, supervisors, and LLMs.
Rather than offering definitive conclusions, this talk seeks to stimulate dialogue, question assumptions, and inspire new forms of collective thinking about the future of scientific research and doctoral training in an AI-driven world.
*This presentation was prepared by human, augmented by LLMs
Sir Bashir M. Al-Hashimi is a distinguished Professor of Engineering, academic leader, and entrepreneur. He has served as Vice President for Research & Innovation at King’s College London since 2022 and holds the Arm Professorship of Computer Engineering (since 2007). His work in hardware–software co-design and energy-efficient computing has shaped modern digital technologies, with innovations used in billions of smartphones worldwide. He is Co-Director of the King’s Institute for Artificial Intelligence.
Elected Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS), the Royal Academy of Engineering (FREng), the European Academy of Sciences and Arts, and Academia Europaea, Sir Bashir is a highly cited researcher with 400 publications, eight books, and 52 supervised PhDs. His honours include the IET Faraday Medal, and the IEEE–HKN Asad M. Madni Award. He was knighted by HM King Charles III in 2025 for exceptional leadership in Engineering and Education and was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) by HM Queen Elizabeth II in 2018, for his contributions to research and innovation. Sir Bashir, in November 2025, launched at the House of Lords, the final report and recommendations of the UK Future Engineering Skills national project, which he led, on behalf of the Royal Academy of Engineering. He has served as Executive Deans of three Engineering and Physical Sciences faculties (2014-2020), University of Southampton, and King’s College London.
For further enquiries regarding this guest lecture, please email the Early Career Researcher Institute (ECRI).