OpenAI Introduces GPT-Rosalind for Life Sciences Research

OpenAI Introduces GPT-Rosalind for Life Sciences Research

Synopsis

The GPT-Rosalind, named after 20th-century British scientist Rosalind Franklin, is designed to support ‌research ⁠across biochemistry, drug ⁠discovery and translational medicine.

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OpenAI on Thursday introduced an artificial intelligence model touting increased biology knowledge and scientific research capabilities, as the startup deepens its push into the life sciences field.

The GPT-Rosalind, named after 20th-century British scientist Rosalind Franklin, is designed to support ‌research ⁠across biochemistry, drug ⁠discovery and translational medicine.

Demand for AI-powered tools to accelerate drug discovery and research has risen across pharmaceutical companies, academic institutions and biotech firms.

"By supporting evidence synthesis, hypothesis generation, experimental planning, and other multi-step research tasks, this model is designed to ​help researchers accelerate the early stages ⁠of discovery," ‌OpenAI said in a blog.

Researchers using ​the model ​will be able to query databases, read ⁠the latest scientific papers, use other scientific tools and ​suggest new experiments, OpenAI said in ​a press briefing. The model was built on top of OpenAI's newest internal models.

GPT-Rosalind is available as a research preview in ChatGPT, Codex, and the API for qualified customers through OpenAI's trusted access deployment structure. ‌The company is also launching a free Life Sciences research plugin for Codex, connecting scientists ​to over ​50 scientific tools ⁠and data sources.

The company said it is working with customers like Amgen, Moderna, Thermo Fisher Scientific and others to apply GPT-Rosalind across workflows.

OpenAI, creator of popular chatbot ChatGPT, on Tuesday unveiled GPT-5.4-Cyber, a variant of its latest flagship model fine-tuned specifically for defensive cybersecurity work, following rival Anthropic's announcement of frontier AI model Mythos.

This editorial summary reflects ET Tech and other public reporting on OpenAI Introduces GPT-Rosalind for Life Sciences Research.

Reviewed by WTGuru editorial team.