Peer-reviewed and academic sources
A peer-reviewed source is a scholarly work, usually a journal article, that has been evaluated for quality and accuracy by independent experts in the same field before publication, serving as a form of academic quality control (usgs).
Peer review is a formal process in which a journal editor sends a submitted manuscript to qualified scholars who scrutinize its methods, argument, use of evidence, and alignment with existing research before recommending acceptance, revision, or rejection. Because only work that meets disciplinary standards is published, peer-reviewed articles are widely regarded as authoritative sources for college-level and professional research (lib.jjay.cuny).
Academic sources are materials written for scholars or students, typically by experts whose credentials are identified, using formal language, systematic methods, and a clear citation apparatus (in-text citations and reference lists). They commonly include peer-reviewed journal articles and books from university presses, which are designed to communicate original research or rigorous analysis rather than general-interest information (library.potsdam).
Academic vs non-academic sources
Academic sources usually feature specialized vocabulary, explicit methods, and a reference list that documents the scholarly conversation in which the work participates. Non-academic sources, such as newspapers, popular magazines, websites, and some trade publications, are often written for the general public, may not identify author credentials, use informal language, and frequently lack detailed references (libanswers.walsh).
Non-academic sources can be useful for background, current events, or public perspectives, but they are not normally subjected to systematic peer review and may prioritize speed, engagement, or opinion over methodological rigor. For academic writing, non-academic sources should therefore supplement, not replace, peer-reviewed and other scholarly materials that provide verifiable evidence and robust analysis (libguides.regiscollege).
AI hallucinations and the need for scholarly sources
Generative AI systems can produce “hallucinations”: content that appears coherent and confident but is factually incorrect, misleading, unsupported, or entirely fabricated. In research contexts, these hallucinations may take the form of non-existent studies, fabricated citations, distorted statistics, or oversimplified interpretations that undermine academic integrity and propagate misinformation (paperpal).
Because AI tools can generate plausible but false claims, relying on peer-reviewed and academic sources is crucial for verifying that the information used in a paper actually exists, has been vetted by experts, and is grounded in documented evidence. When writers anchor their arguments in verifiable scholarly work instead of unverified AI output, they help protect both themselves and their readers from false-positive hallucinations that could compromise the credibility of their research (apus.libanswers).
Indicators of AI-generated hallucinations in writing
One indicator that AI hallucinations may be present is the inclusion of citations that look legitimate—complete with realistic titles, author names, journal names, and DOIs—but do not correspond to any actual publication when searched in library databases or on the open web. Instructors and librarians increasingly report “hallucinated” sources of this kind, which signal that the writer did not consult the original documents and instead relied on AI-generated references (askusatthelibrary.liberty).
Other signs of possible AI-generated content include unusually uniform paragraph lengths and highly formulaic phrasing, abrupt shifts in voice or sophistication compared with a student’s previous work, and inconsistent or impossible details (for example, incorrect dates, invented statistics, or mismatched factual claims). Patterns such as perfectly polished grammar from a writer who normally struggles, generic discussion that fails to engage course-specific material, and citation styles that are inconsistent or incorrect can also raise red flags for instructors (eastcentral).
The role of APA in-text citations and references
In APA style, in-text citations briefly identify the author and year of a source, while the reference list provides full publication details that allow readers to locate the exact works cited. This two-part system both acknowledges intellectual debts and enables transparent verification, which is essential when AI tools may have introduced errors or invented materials (midmich).
For instructors, in-text citations linked to a References section provide a roadmap for checking whether a cited study actually exists, whether it says what the paper claims, and whether the citation details match library records. When an instructor can move from an in-text citation to a complete reference and then to the full source, it becomes much easier to detect hallucinated articles, fabricated DOIs, or misrepresented findings that may originate from AI-generated output (inra).









