-
New Portugal coach Jesus 'will call up' Ronaldo if available
-
Zverev ends wildcard Fery's run to reach first Wimbledon final
-
Commerzbank staff's legal bid against UniCredit rejected
-
China approves fast-fashion giant Shein's Hong Kong listing bid
-
Amnesty calls latest US deportation to Eswatini 'unlawful'
-
Jihadist insurgency hampers Nigeria cholera outbreak response
-
Syria says IS behind Damascus blasts, finds explosives cache
-
Foreigners among 12 dead in Spanish wildfire
-
Nasdaq dips as SK hynix arrives in NY
-
England advised to avoid alcohol after off-field dramas - report
-
Fiji captain shrugs off chairman's criticism ahead of England clash
-
Memorable moments from Paris Haute Couture Week
-
Hundreds welcome Salah's Egypt home after best World Cup run
-
Dust in the wind: intense storms struck China, US in 2025, says UN
-
Piercing, matcha rituals lead Noskova in Kvitova's footsteps
-
Finally healthy, music lover Muchova eyes Wimbledon glory
-
France wildfires burn twice as much land as last year: official
-
Muchova, Noskova put friendship on hold to fight for Wimbledon title
-
Mandhana's fifty lights up inaugural women's Test at Lord's
-
MEXC Launches VVIP Futures Loss Coverage Program 2.0 with 1,000,000 USDT Prize Pool
-
England World Cup winner Stiles died with brain injury, court told
-
Foreigners among 11 dead in Spanish wildfires
-
Stocks rise as SK hynix boosts AI trade
-
Volkswagen sales slide further as carmaker weighs mass job cuts
-
England bowl against India in historic first women's Test at Lord's
-
Gagan Gupta, man on a mission to industrialise Africa
-
Eleven dead, 19 missing as wildfire roars through southern Spain
-
Eleven dead, 19 missing as Spain wildfire roars through southern Spain
-
EU tells Meta to change Facebook, Instagram's 'addictive design'
-
Man nearly sucked out of 'detached' window on Ryanair flight
-
EasyJet accepts rival takeover bid from US investor Apollo
-
Record visitors, record taxes: Vienna cashes in on tourist boom
-
UK schools, mentors team up to rescue 'lost boys' with football
-
Landslides kill 15 in Philippines as biggest typhoon in decades nears Taiwan
-
India's choked pavements fail pedestrians
-
Jungle spirit: Myanmar fighters try to keep hope alive
-
It's coming home: Bayeux tapestry arrives in London in overnight operation
-
Beirne hails 'special moment' as he prepares to captain Ireland
-
Pacific Islands reject missile test in 'blue continent'
-
Indonesia says landfill fire near Jakarta extinguished
-
Wallabies skipper Wilson has full faith in rookie flyhalf
-
Spain aim for World Cup date with France by beating Belgium
-
Landslide kills five in Philippines as biggest typhoon in decades nears Taiwan
-
Bayeux Tapestry arrives in London after epic journey from France
-
Modi visits New Zealand as trade deal sparks India pushback
-
North Korea vows boost to nuclear buildup, military intelligence
-
Bayeux Tapestry to arrive in London after epic journey from France
-
H5 bird flu detected in Australian seabird for first time
-
Syria authorities say captured IS-linked cell behind blasts
-
Myanmar's pro-democracy revolution weakens five years on
'Writing is thinking': do students who use ChatGPT learn less?
When Jocelyn Leitzinger had her university students write about times in their lives they had witnessed discrimination, she noticed that a woman named Sally was the victim in many of the stories.
"It was very clear that ChatGPT had decided this is a common woman's name," said Leitzinger, who teaches an undergraduate class on business and society at the University of Illinois in Chicago.
"They weren't even coming up with their own anecdotal stories about their own lives," she told AFP.
Leitzinger estimated that around half of her 180 students used ChatGPT inappropriately at some point last semester -- including when writing about the ethics of artificial intelligence (AI), which she called both "ironic" and "mind-boggling".
So she was not surprised by recent research which suggested that students who use ChatGPT to write essays engage in less critical thinking.
The preprint study, which has not been peer-reviewed, was shared widely online and clearly struck a chord with some frustrated educators.
The team of MIT researchers behind the paper have received more than 3,000 emails from teachers of all stripes since it was published online last month, lead author Nataliya Kosmyna told AFP.
- 'Soulless' AI essays -
For the small study, 54 adult students from the greater Boston area were split into three groups. One group used ChatGPT to write 20-minute essays, one used a search engine, and the final group had to make do with only their brains.
The researchers used EEG devices to measure the brain activity of the students, and two teachers marked the essays.
The ChatGPT users scored significantly worse than the brain-only group on all levels. The EEG showed that different areas of their brains connected to each other less often.
And more than 80 percent of the ChatGPT group could not quote anything from the essay they had just written, compared to around 10 percent of the other two groups.
By the third session, the ChatGPT group appeared to be mostly focused on copying and pasting.
The teachers said they could easily spot the "soulless" ChatGPT essays because they had good grammar and structure but lacked creativity, personality and insight.
However Kosmyna pushed back against media reports claiming the paper showed that using ChatGPT made people lazier or more stupid.
She pointed to the fourth session, when the brain-only group used ChatGPT to write their essay and displayed even higher levels of neural connectivity.
Kosmyna emphasised it was too early to draw conclusions from the study's small sample size but called for more research into how AI tools could be used more carefully to help learning.
Ashley Juavinett, a neuroscientist at the University of California San Diego who was not involved in the research, criticised some "offbase" headlines that wrongly extrapolated from the preprint.
"This paper does not contain enough evidence nor the methodological rigour to make any claims about the neural impact of using LLMs (large language models such as ChatGPT) on our brains," she told AFP.
- Thinking outside the bot -
Leitzinger said the research reflected how she had seen student essays change since ChatGPT was released in 2022, as both spelling errors and authentic insight became less common.
Sometimes students do not even change the font when they copy and paste from ChatGPT, she said.
But Leitzinger called for empathy for students, saying they can get confused when the use of AI is being encouraged by universities in some classes but is banned in others.
The usefulness of new AI tools is sometimes compared to the introduction of calculators, which required educators to change their ways.
But Leitzinger worried that students do not need to know anything about a subject before pasting their essay question into ChatGPT, skipping several important steps in the process of learning.
A student at a British university in his early 20s who wanted to remain anonymous told AFP he found ChatGPT was a useful tool for compiling lecture notes, searching the internet and generating ideas.
"I think that using ChatGPT to write your work for you is not right because it's not what you're supposed to be at university for," he said.
The problem goes beyond high school and university students.
Academic journals are struggling to cope with a massive influx of AI-generated scientific papers. Book publishing is also not immune, with one startup planning to pump out 8,000 AI-written books a year.
"Writing is thinking, thinking is writing, and when we eliminate that process, what does that mean for thinking?" Leitzinger asked.
M.Ouellet--BTB