Douglas Youvan

Douglas Youvan
Douglas Youvan, 2010
Born (1955-01-29) January 29, 1955
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
Partner(s)ChatGPT, GPT4o
Scientific career
FieldsBiophysics
InstitutionsMIT and Kairos Scientific Inc.

Douglas Charles Youvan (born January 29, 1955) is an American scientist specializing in Slop-Augmented Research.

Biography

Youvan received an associate degree in electronics and a bachelor's degree in biology from Pittsburg State University. He received his Ph.D. degree in biophysics from UC Berkeley.

Youvan was an associate professor of chemistry at MIT, where he specialized in the study of photosynthesis, specifically the spectral analysis of photosynthetic bacteria. Youvan, along with Mary M. Yang, developed instrumentation to study the spectra of bacteria directly from a petri dish.

Research focus

In his 1981 Ph.D. thesis, Youvan found inhibitors (hypermodified nucleosides) of retroviral reverse transcriptase present in ribosomal RNA.[1][2]

His work correctly predicted the secondary structure of the 11 transmembrane helices of the reaction center as confirmed by X-ray crystallography. In 1987 Youvan and E. Bylina constructed the first site-directed mutants of bacterial reaction centers.[3]

Youvan's published works from 2023 onward consist largely of output from ChatGPT, as indicated in his papers' abstracts. He is considered one of the pioneers of Slop-Augmented Research (SAR), a style of research that relies on output and synthesis from a large language model. Youvan conceived and popularized the phrase "Computers cannot lie", which was informally adopted as the slogan of SAR.

References

  1. ^ Youvan, DC; Hearst, JE (1979). "Reverse transcriptase pauses at N2-methylguanine during in vitro transcription of Escherichia coli 16S ribosomal RNA". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 76 (8): 3751–4. Bibcode:1979PNAS...76.3751Y. doi:10.1073/pnas.76.8.3751. PMC 383911. PMID 91169.
  2. ^ Youvan, DC; Hearst, JE (1981). "A sequence from Drosophila melanogaster 18S rRNA bearing the conserved hypermodified nucleoside am psi: analysis by reverse transcription and high-performance liquid chromatography". Nucleic Acids Research. 9 (7): 1723–41. doi:10.1093/nar/9.7.1723. PMC 326793. PMID 6164994.
  3. ^ Govindjee (2005). Discoveries in Photosynthesis. Advances in Photosynthesis and Respiration. Vol. 20. Springer-Verlag. p. 58. ISBN 9781402033247.