▲ | memco 5 days ago | |||||||
It’s also worth noting that this was specifically about the effects of ChatGPT on users’s ability to write essays: which means that if you don’t practice your writing skills, then your writing skills decline. This doesn’t seem to show that it is harmful just that it does not induce the same brain activity that is observed in other essay writing methods. Additionally, the original paper uses the term “cognitive debt“ not cognitive decline, which may have an important ramifications for interpretation and conclusions. I wouldn’t be surprised to see similar results in other similar types of studies, but it does feel a bit premature to broadly conclude that all LLM/AI use is harmful to your brain. In a less alarmist take: this could also be read to show that AI use effectively simplifies the essay writing process by reducing cognitive load, therefore making essays easier and more accessible to a broader audience but that would require a different study to see how well the participants scored on their work. | ||||||||
▲ | bjourne 5 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> In a less alarmist take: this could also be read to show that AI use effectively simplifies the essay writing process by reducing cognitive load, therefore making essays easier and more accessible to a broader audience but that would require a different study to see how well the participants scored on their work. In much the same way chess engines make competitive chess accessible to a broader audience. :) | ||||||||
▲ | sarchertech 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
It also showed that people couldn’t successfully recall information about what they’d just written when they used LLM assistance. Writing is an important form of learning and this clearly shows LLM assisted writing doesn’t provide that benefit. | ||||||||
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