
"According to writing expert Naomi Alderman, the key is to look at the way the words fit together, rather than what they are saying. 'Words that ought to be working together are instead not even fighting each other - fighting is interesting - but coming apart in your hands like a cheaply-made toy,' Ms Alderman explained in a blog post."
"According to Ms Alderman, one of AI's most obvious giveaways is that the content is extremely generic. ChatGPT and other chatbots are a type of AI called a Large Language Model, which creates sentences by predicting which word is the most likely to follow in the sequence. Although this makes an extremely convincing simulation of intelligence, there isn't any thinking going on behind the generated strings of words."
"This means that AI-generated text often sounds generic or lacking in the personality that a human would be able to create. Additionally, since AIs are typically designed to be helpful, they tend to produce language that is friendly and somewhat professional. Ms Alderman says: 'Even when you've asked them to be salty you still often get the feeling from the writing that they're"
Unexpected romantic texts can be produced by AI chatbots and are increasingly used to message crushes and long-term partners. Large Language Models generate sentences by predicting the most likely next word, so the output can imitate intelligence while lacking actual thought. AI-generated messages often sound generic, friendly, and professionally helpful, and may lack individual personality. Examining how words fit together can reveal unnatural phrasing; coherent human phrasing often contains dynamic tension, whereas AI text can feel like language coming apart. These patterns help identify artificial messages despite convincing content.
Read at Mail Online
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