Automatic Generation of Cheating Reports

Grep announced on May 21 that it has integrated an LLM-based artificial intelligence (AI) agent into its online exam proctoring solution, 'Monito'.


With this update, Monito has been advanced beyond the previous AI’s capability of simply detecting physical movements. Now, it can understand the context of suspected cheating incidents and summarize and report them in descriptive reports. Grep aims to usher in the era of the "AI proctor" through this upgrade.


An image showing the application of an LLM-based AI agent to the online exam proctoring solution "Monito." Grepp

An image showing the application of an LLM-based AI agent to the online exam proctoring solution "Monito." Grepp

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The newly added AI agent panel in Monito is positioned on the right side of the proctoring screen and delivers real-time analysis results. While the previous system only notified proctors of physical events, such as "a hand moved out of the frame," the new AI agent analyzes and reports behavioral patterns, for example, "the test-taker repeatedly looked away in a specific direction during the exam."


The main features include: ▲ contextual summaries that explain the background of suspicious behaviors by adding context to the AI detection results; ▲ a cheating score that allows proctors to sort and review test-takers by risk level; and ▲ instant navigation to the relevant video segment whenever suspicious activity is detected, enabling rapid assessment.


Grep plans to further advance its proctoring operations system during the first half of this year.



Seongsu Lim, CEO of Grep, stated, "The most challenging part of exam proctoring is determining whether a specific action is actually cheating," and added, "This update will address the real difficulties faced in the field."


This content was produced with the assistance of AI translation services.

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