IBL News | New York
OpenAI introduced last month ‘Prism’, a free, cloud-based workspace for scientists to write and collaborate on research, with the model GPT‑5.2 for mathematical and scientific reasoning integrated directly into the workflow.
Built for collaboration at scale, Prism includes unlimited projects and collaborators: co-authors, students, advisors, and reviewers, often across institutions and geographies, as it is. It is available today to anyone with a ChatGPT personal account. There are no subscriptions or seat limits.
More powerful AI features will be made available through paid ChatGPT plans over time.
The company believes that while AI will play a meaningful role in how science advances, much of the everyday work of research, such as drafting papers, revising arguments, managing equations and citations, and coordinating with collaborators, remains fragmented across disconnected tools.
Researchers often move between editors, PDFs, LaTeX compilers, reference managers, and separate chat interfaces, losing context and interrupting focus.
“Prism is our first step toward addressing this fragmentation,” said OpenAI. “Advanced reasoning systems like GPT‑5 are helping push the frontiers of mathematics, accelerating the analysis of human immune-cell experiments, and speeding up experimental iteration in molecular biology.”
Prism brings drafting, revision, collaboration, and publication preparation into a single, cloud-based, LaTeX-native workspace.
Specifically, researchers can:
- Chat with GPT‑5.2 Thinking, to explore ideas, test hypotheses, and reason through complex scientific problems in context
- Draft and revise papers with the full document as context, including surrounding text, equations, citations, figures, and overall structure
- Search for and incorporate relevant literature (for example, from arXiv) in the context of the current manuscript, and revise text in light of newly identified related work
- Create, refactor, and reason over equations, citations, and figures, with AI that understands how those elements relate across the paper
- Turn whiteboard equations or diagrams directly into LaTeX, saving hours of time manipulating graphics pixel-by-pixel
- Collaborate with co-authors, students, and advisors in real time, with edits, comments, and revisions reflected immediately
- Make direct, in-place changes to the document when requested, without copying content between separate editors or chat tools
- Use optional voice-based editing to make simple changes without interrupting writing or review
Rather than operating as a separate tool alongside the writing process, GPT‑5.2 works within the project itself, with access to the paper’s structure, equations, references, and surrounding context.
Prism builds on the foundation of Crixet, a cloud-based LaTeX platform that OpenAI acquired and has since evolved into Prism as a unified product.
This allowed the company to start with a strong base in a mature writing and collaboration environment and to integrate AI in a way that fits naturally into scientific workflows.
“By making high-quality scientific tools easier to adopt and broadly available, we hope to enable more researchers—across institutions, disciplines, and career stages—to participate fully in the scientific process,” said OpenAI.
“In 2025, AI changed software development forever. In 2026, we expect a comparable shift in science. Prism is an early step toward that future.”
• Prism access at prism.openai.com.
