Who Wrote This?
Carrie Fox (she/her)
Communicator for Good | CEO, Mission Partners | B Corp leader | Host, Mission Forward podcast | Author, MORE THAN WORDS and Adventures in Kindness
This week’s article was AI-generated. Or was it?
It’s an important question for you to answer as AI-generated writing is quickly becoming indistinguishable from human writing.
How to tell??
If you’ve started to wonder for yourself, the good news is there are several clear signs of AI-generated text—and you can be trained to spot them.
A team of researchers at the?University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science found that people can learn to spot the difference between machine-generated and human-written text—and discern the reliability of sources in the process.
The researchers?built a game called Real or Fake Text? to test how many sentences a computer can generate before a human can regularly spot AI text. They?found that people get gradually better over time.?It takes practice, and the learning models are constantly evolving, but with some practice, you can better spot AI text, too.
In addition to building up a muscle for AI detection through practice, there are a few other telltale signs that writing may be AI-generated:
As I’ve shared in this column before, AI is most powerful when used to augment and enhance human intelligence rather than replace it. While the use of AI in communication?moving forward is inevitable, it is only human to have a brain, a heart, and a conscience.?If you want to distinguish between real and fake, look for the human between the words.
Oh, and if you were still wondering,?this article was NOT AI-generated, though I did consult my digital twin to pull up a summary of my past articles on AI.
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