Fiction written by artificial intelligence is easy to detect because it struggles with complex story structure and tends to moralize in clunky ways, according to a preprint study from researchers at University of Maryland, College Park and Google DeepMind. They found that AI fiction has tells that go beyond stereotypical overuse of em-dashes and other obvious AI tropes and have more to do with the formulaic nature of the text itself.

“AI stories over-explain themes and favor tidy, single-track plots while human stories frame protagonists’ choices as more morally ambiguous and have increased temporal complexity,” the study, which looked at more than 50,000 AI-generated short stories, found. “Claude produces notably flat event escalation, GPT over-indexes on dream sequences, and Gemini defaults to external character description. We find that AI-generated stories cluster in a shared region of narrative space, while human-authored stories exhibit greater diversity. More broadly, these results suggest that differences in underlying narrative construction, not just writing style, can be used to separate human-written original works from AI-generated fiction.”

Basically, AI-generated fiction sucks and at the moment is easy to detect. The typical method of detection involves looking for stylistic markers such as an abundance of em-dashes, the overuse of the word “delve,” or an obsession with goblins, but this project tried something different. “The idea for this project came because we are hoping to eventually move past plain text detection, into some sort of space where we can separate human ideas from AI-generated ideas,” Jenna Russell, a University of Maryland researcher and one of the study’s authors, told 404 Media. Russell is also an intern at the AI-detection company Pangram.

      • Dpek@lemmy.zip
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        20 hours ago

        Not so sure about that

        Decent chunck is just the greed of hopeing to use it to replace people + the “if it can do it despite its issues then imagine what it will do with people to compensate for the issues” people (so the reduce costs + inprove output people)

        • MartianRecon@lemmus.org
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          2 days ago

          No there isn’t. The use-case for AI is hyper specific, in that it’s decent at comparative analysis. Feed it a data set and then have it give you data out of that data set. Even then, ai is lying to people about what is in the data. So no, there’s no ‘potential’ in something that cannot be profitable and is absolutely awful for the environment.