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Colleagues in the Learning and Applied Innovation group continue to explore and learn about the possibilities of genAI to support teaching and learning, and are available to consult with faculty members and academic staff about potential educational uses. This list of generative AI (genAI) tools is intended to raise awareness and share information about some of the most popular tools currently available. We have curated these tools into categories with an eye toward potential use in educational settings. This limited collection is meant to be representative of genAI tools that have certain functionality (e.g., generating text or images, summarizing ideas in a file or article, and analyzing data); while also recognizing that there is overlap among tools and uses. 
 

For those interested in a more comprehensive collection of generative AI tools, ITHAKA S+R has a project underway called the , that lists generative AI tools that are either marketed specifically towards postsecondary faculty or students or appear to be actively in use by postsecondary faculty or students for teaching, learning, or research activities. The tracker is a living document that is regularly updated.

Please note: When using generative AI tools, it is important to avoid entering sensitive information to protect privacy and ensure data security. Please note that these tools have their own terms of service, a mix of free and paid subscription models, and may not ensure the confidentiality of the information shared. ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø does not endorse any specific AI tools.

Foundational AI Models

These tools represent some of the most widely used AI models, many of which serve as the basis for more specialized applications. Both Google and Microsoft are working to integrate their foundational models with internet search functionality.


Gemini is Google’s AI chatbot, combining machine learning and Natural Language Processing (NLP). It is currently available with through your ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø Google account.


Copilot is Microsoft’s chatbot, built on OpenAI’s models. It offers and is accessible through your ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø credentials.

(Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer)
Developed by OpenAI, ChatGPT uses NLP to answer questions, generate content, summarize information, and more. The free version has usage constraints and no data protection, access to the latest models (ChatGPT Plus) is subscription-based with monthly fees.


Anthropic’s chatbot, Claude, also employs NLP to address prompts and analyze certain document types. The free version has usage constraints and no data protection, access to the latest models (Pro) is subscription-based with monthly fees.

AI Detection Tools

It is important to be aware that detection tools are imperfect - and currently - no software is able to determine AI-generated text with 100% accuracy. Within academic contexts, AI detection tools might be used to identify situations where further inquiry into the use of AI-generated text may be needed. They should not be considered as a definitive measure in situations considering academic dishonesty. See following document for additional guidance: (

AI Research Assistants and Assistance

This category of genAI tools can assist with research / reading related tasks. These tools can summarize articles, and permit conversational queries within uploaded files.


Analyze research papers using and automate time-consuming research tasks like literature reviews, summarizing papers, and extracting data.


Perplexity is a free AI-powered 'answer engine' that provides real-time answers to questions.  It is much like a search engine with enhancements that allow it to use natural language processing to frame your questions.


Consensus is a search engine that uses AI to find insights in research papers.


Understands what you’re researching and gives you recommendations for related articles, personalized digests, and visualizations of networks of papers and co-authorships.


AI-powered article summarizer.


AI-powered tool to help you understand research papers better.


Julius can answer questions about data, perform analysis, and generate visualizations from uploaded files.  It can also provide the needed python code to complete these tasks.

Image Generation

This category of tools generates and/or edits images from text-based prompts.


DALL-E 3 is the latest version of OpenAI’s text-to-image system that more accurately adheres to the details of the prompt (for ChatGPT Plus users).


Text-to-image generator that excels in text rendering for images.


Image Creator uses OpenAI’s DALL·E 3 to generate AI images based on your text.


Stable Diffusion is an AI art generator that enables users to create unique imagery from short text descriptions, also known as prompts.


Use simple text prompts to create the high quality output images. Make all-new content from reference images.


Powered by Google's Imagen text-to-image diffusion model, ImageFX presents a dedicated interface for the same technology that powers Gemini's image generation feature.

Video Generation

This category of tools generates videos from text-based prompts.


Synthesia is a tool that allows you to turn text into video with AI generated speakers and voices.


Gen-1 Runway uses images and text prompts to generate videos.


Generates video, voiceovers, and scripts to help accelerate creative work.


Video production software aimed at using AI to generate avatars and voices for video work. 

Programming and Coding

These tools can be used to generate computer code in a range of programming languages using text-based prompts and descriptions.


GitHub Copilot is an AI pair programmer that translates natural human language into programming code.


CodeWhisperer is an AI coding companion from Amazon that can generate code suggestions based on your comments and existing code.


Integrates AI chat into Jupyter Notebooks to assist with writing and proofing code.