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    AI Megathread

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved No Escape from Reality
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    • somasatoriS
      somasatori @Pavel
      last edited by

      @Pavel said in AI Megathread:

      @somasatori said in AI Megathread:

      People have recently assumed that I was using AI (not great for clinical writing) and thus everything is over-parenthized. Over-parenthesesed?

      I’ve started using semicolons more in my notes:

      Client reported improved sleep this week — though still experiencing early-morning waking when stressed.
      vs
      Client reported improved sleep this week; still experiencing early-morning waking when stressed.

      This is honestly a great idea. I’m really thankful for the suggestion!

      "And the Fool says, pointing to the invertebrate fauna feeding in the graves: 'Here a monarchy reigns, mightier than you: His Majesty the Worm.'"
      Italo Calvino, The Castle of Crossed Destines

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • hellfrogH
        hellfrog
        last edited by

        If your rp isn’t boring and hollow, then it won’t ping as AI even if you use em-dashes for whatever reason. It’s not just the dashes.

        fr fr
        (she/her)

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • FaradayF
          Faraday @Pavel
          last edited by

          @Pavel said in AI Megathread:

          I’ve started using semicolons more in my notes:

          Until some article points out that semicolons also occur more often in AI-generated work than in the average (non-professional) writing, and you’re right back where you’ve started. I’m honestly surprised it isn’t mentioned in the wikipedia article, since I’ve seen it highlighted elsewhere.

          @Trashcan said in AI Megathread:

          These tools are aware of the negative ramifications of a false positive and are biased towards not returning them.

          And yet they still do, and not necessarily at the 1% false-positive rate they claim. For example, from the Univ of San Diego Legal Research Center:

          Recent studies also indicate that neurodivergent students (autism, ADHD, dyslexia, etc…) and students for whom English is a second language are flagged by AI detection tools at higher rates than native English speakers due to reliance on repeated phrases, terms, and words.

          This has been widely reported elsewhere too. It’s a real concern and it has real-world implications on peoples’ lives when they are falsely accused of cheating/etc.

          TrashcanT PavelP 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • TrashcanT
            Trashcan @Faraday
            last edited by Trashcan

            @Faraday said in AI Megathread:

            For example, from the Univ of San Diego Legal Research Center:

            If we’re getting down to the level of sample size and methodology, it’s probably worth mentioning that this study looked at 88 essays and ‘recent’ in this context was May 2023, or 6 months after the release of ChatGPT. It is safe to assume the technology has progressed.

            he/him
            this machine kills fascists

            FaradayF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • FaradayF
              Faraday @Trashcan
              last edited by Faraday

              @Trashcan It is good to examine the robustness of the particular studies referenced in that article (some of which were from 2023, not 2024, though), but I’ve seen no evidence that the tech on the whole has gotten any better in this particular regard.

              hellfrogH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • hellfrogH
                hellfrog @Faraday
                last edited by

                @Faraday ok but 88 essays is not a sample size that anyone can take seriously.

                fr fr
                (she/her)

                FaradayF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • FaradayF
                  Faraday @hellfrog
                  last edited by

                  @hellfrog I’m not really sure what study you’re talking about that specifically had the 88 essays. The Univ of San Diego site I linked to had a whole bunch of studies referenced, and I cited their overall conclusions. I am also drawing from reporting I’ve read in other media sources, but which I don’t have immediately handy.

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                  • PavelP
                    Pavel @Faraday
                    last edited by

                    @Faraday said in AI Megathread:

                    Until some article points out that semicolons also occur more often in AI-generated work than in the average (non-professional) writing, and you’re right back where you’ve started.

                    I don’t like this game anymore.

                    He/Him. Opinions and views are solely my own unless specifically stated otherwise.
                    BE AN ADULT

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • GashlycrumbG
                      Gashlycrumb
                      last edited by Gashlycrumb

                      I’ve got this AI detector thing and I hate it with the hatey black hate sauce.

                      No, you stupid thing, 100% of this student’s paper isn’t likely to be AI, I’ve watched him building this argument for twelve weeks.

                      Say, what, this one’s paper is also likely all AI? Who the heck tells AI to do APA formating so creatively wrongly?

                      Yeah, right, this is so likely all AI, the student fed the assignment into AI along with the instructions, “Write this in the style of someone who doesn’t know how to write an academic paper trying to write an academic paper.”

                      I really hope other instructors are not taking this daft thing seriously.

                      "This is Liberty Hall; you can spit on the mat and call the cat a bastard!"
                      – A. Bertram Chandler

                      TrashcanT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                      • TrashcanT
                        Trashcan @Gashlycrumb
                        last edited by

                        @Gashlycrumb
                        That does sound frustrating, and while I’ve been in defense of the odds of AI detectors not falsely accusing people throughout this thread, it’s still worth noting that even recent studies find wide disparities between product offerings. From one of the studies already linked:
                        0de3a57b-3a91-4268-aa98-004c722ced0b-image.png

                        Clearly RoBERTa, the open-source offering, is not something anyone should be using. I hope there’s some sort of feedback mechanism to the administration that the particular tool they’ve selected is highly unsuited to the task.

                        he/him
                        this machine kills fascists

                        FaradayF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • FaradayF
                          Faraday @Trashcan
                          last edited by Faraday

                          @Trashcan I don’t know where essays fit into that chart, but let’s pretend for the sake of argument it’s on par with the GPTZero news articles at 1% false positive rate. With millions of students writing millions of essays, that’s still hundreds of thousands of people falsely being accused of cheating, with potentially ruinous consequences. That’s just not acceptable IMHO.

                          TrashcanT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • TrashcanT
                            Trashcan @Faraday
                            last edited by

                            @Faraday
                            There was cheating before AI and there were false accusations of cheating before AI detectors. Being falsely accused of using AI is no more serious than being accused of plagiarism.

                            What is the alternative?

                            he/him
                            this machine kills fascists

                            FaradayF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • FaradayF
                              Faraday @Trashcan
                              last edited by Faraday

                              @Trashcan I think you’re underestimating the psychological effect that takes place when people trust in tools. There’s a big difference between “I think this student may have cheated” and “This tool is telling me this student cheated” when laypeople don’t understand the limitations of the tool.

                              I’ve studied human factors design, and there’s something that happens with peoples’ mindsets once a computer gets involved. We see this all the time - whether it’s reliance on facial recognition in criminal applications, self-driving cars, automated medical algorithms, etc.

                              Also, plagiarism detectors are less impactful because they can point to a source and the teacher can do a human review to determine whether they think it’s too closely copied. That doesn’t work for AI detection. It’s all based on vibes, which can disproportionately impact minority populations (like neurodivergent and ESL students). I also highly doubt that hundreds of thousands of students are falsely accused of plagiarism each year, but I can’t prove it.

                              As for the alternative? I don’t think there is one single silver bullet. IMHO we need structural change.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • YamY
                                Yam
                                last edited by

                                Just to summarize, and please correct me, Trashcan thinks that SOME amount of false positives (1%) using tools is acceptable in the fight against AI and Faraday thinks that ZERO amount of false positives using tools is acceptable in the fight against AI? Am I understanding that you think its better to trust your gut here, Faraday?

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