OpenAI launches AI model GPT-Rosalind for life sciences research

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.

Story continues below this ad

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.

Comments are closed.