OpenAI launched a new scientific workspace program called Prism on Tuesday. It is available for free to anyone with a ChatGPT account. Designed as an AI-enhanced word processor and research tool for scientific papers, Prism is deeply integrated with GPT-5.2. This integration allows the model to assess claims, revise prose, and search for prior research.
Prism is not designed to conduct research on its own without human guidance. Executives believe it will accelerate the work being done by human scientists and have compared Prism to coding interfaces like Cursor and Windsurf. Kevin Weill, VP of OpenAI for Science, said in a press call that he thinks 2026 will be for AI and science what 2025 was for AI and software engineering.
The new software arrives as OpenAI observes a flood of scientific queries coming to its consumer products like ChatGPT. The company states that ChatGPT receives an average of 8.4 million messages a week on advanced topics in the hard sciences, though it is difficult to know how many are from professional researchers.
AI-assisted research is also becoming more common among academic researchers. In mathematics, AI models have been used to prove a number of long-standing Erdos problems through a combination of literature review and new applications of existing techniques. While the significance of the proofs is still hotly debated, the results have been an early victory for proponents of AI models and formal verification systems.
A statistics paper published in December used GPT 5.2 Pro to establish new proofs for a central axiom of statistical theory, with human researchers only prompting and verifying the model’s work. OpenAI applauded the result in a blog post, presenting it as a model for human-AI collaboration in research going forward. The post stated that in domains with axiomatic theoretical foundations, frontier models can help explore proofs, test hypotheses, and identify connections that might otherwise take substantial human effort to uncover.
Much of the value of OpenAI’s new system comes from simple product work on existing standards. Prism integrates with LaTeX, an open-source system used to format and typeset scientific papers, but goes significantly beyond most available LaTeX software tools. The program also leverages GPT 5.2’s visual capabilities to allow researchers to assemble diagrams from online whiteboard drawings, which can be a significant pain point with existing tools.
Perhaps the most powerful feature comes from combining the usual powers of an AI model with more rigorous context management. When users open a ChatGPT window through Prism, the model can access the full context of the research project, making responses both more germane and more intelligent. Much of that would be possible for a savvy user of GPT-5.2, but OpenAI is hoping that a cleaner interface will draw in scientific researchers more quickly. Weill described it as the same combination of factors that made AI tools so powerful in software engineering, noting that software engineering accelerated in part because of amazing models and in part because of deep workflow integration.

