This article, was published mid-2025, providing an overview of the impact of Copilot researcher and analyst agents on work.
Having now used both for 6 months plus, my take on these two agents, is that they can be useful, but need to used with care.
1) working out what is to be done is important. Responses from researcher or analyst agents, arise through the prompts provided. Careful structuring of prompts is therefore essential in obtaining the types of actions required. Otherwise, researcher may go off topic quite easily.
2) providing context is important and delimiting the researcher/analyse agents to specific papers, websites or attachments help ringfence the direction of responses.
3) using the prompt writing agent in Copilot can be useful for tightening prompts.
4) ensuring that 'work or 'web' is selected, along with depth of responses (auto, quick, think deeper) helps again to ensure responses fit expectations.
5) Triangulation is always required, to check the validity of the responses. Limiting resources also help to save time, so that triangulation is restricted and does not have to go all over the place.
6) Draw on the advantages of AI. Summarising key points, comparison of key points across papers/sites, drilling deeper to extend insights, providing 'neutral' perspectives on conceptualisations, frameworks etc.
7) be aware of 'cognitive debt' / 'cognitive atrophy' and how this can come about very easily when your critical thinking is replaced by AI doing the work. You still need to read deeply, cogitate, make your own judgements and come up with your own synthesis. Then use AI to cross check these and see if it provides other insights which are viable.
8) Continue to learn how to manage AI to draw on it's ability to automate some research processes. The key is to use AI as a thinking partner, not to replace your own effortful thinking.