Chicago Guide: Citing AI-Generated Content in Chicago Style
Answer
📗 Chicago Guide: Citing AI-Generated Content
Text, images, and summaries generated by AI tools
✅ Short Answer
Cite AI tools whenever you quote, paraphrase, summarize, or use generated content. Chicago offers two styles:
- Notes and Bibliography (used in the humanities)
- Author–Date (used in sciences and social sciences)
🖊️ Notes and Bibliography Style
Footnote (first mention):
1. ChatGPT, response to “Explain the symbolism in The Great Gatsby,” OpenAI, July 15, 2025, https://chat.openai.com/.
Bibliography entry:
ChatGPT. Response to “Explain the symbolism in The Great Gatsby.” OpenAI. July 15, 2025. https://chat.openai.com/.
📚 Author–Date Style
In-text citation: (ChatGPT 2025)
Reference list entry:
ChatGPT. 2025. “Explain the symbolism in The Great Gatsby.” OpenAI. July 15, 2025. https://chat.openai.com/.
📝 Optional Disclosure
Consider adding a note to explain your use of AI tools:
I used ChatGPT to help draft portions of this paper. All AI-generated content was reviewed and edited by the author.
📋 Citation Template
Element | Example |
---|---|
Prompt | “Explain the symbolism in The Great Gatsby” |
Tool Name | ChatGPT |
Developer | OpenAI |
Date Generated | July 15, 2025 |
URL | https://chat.openai.com/ |
🖼️ Other Tools: DALL·E Example
Footnote:
DALL·E, response to “Image of a panda in space,” OpenAI, June 12, 2025, https://openai.com/dall-e.
Bibliography:
DALL·E. Response to “Image of a panda in space.” OpenAI. June 12, 2025. https://openai.com/dall-e.
⚠️ Best Practices
- Verify AI output. Don’t cite hallucinated or fabricated information.
- Use general URLs. Chat links are often private; link to the tool homepage.
- AI is not a person. Use the name of the tool as the author or title.
- Include full dates. Chicago prefers specific publication dates when available.