Student Creates App to Detect Essays Written by AI
In response to the text-generating bot ChatGPT, the new tool measures sentence complexity and variation to predict whether an author was human.
Daily Correspondent

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In response to the text-generating bot ChatGPT, the new tool measures sentence complexity and variation to predict whether an author was human.
Daily Correspondent
In November, artificial intelligence company OpenAI released a powerful newย bot called ChatGPT, a free tool that can generate text about a variety of topics based on a userโs prompts. The AI quickly captivated users across the internet, who asked it to write anything fromย song lyricsย in the style of a particular artist to programming code.
But the technology has also sparked concerns of AI plagiarism among teachers, who have seen students use the app to write their assignments and claim the work as their own. Some professors have shifted their curricula because of ChatGPT, replacing take-home essays with in-class assignments, handwritten papers or oral exams, reports Kalley Huang for theย New York Times.ย
โ[ChatGPT] is very much coming up with original content,โย Kendall Hartley, a professor of educational training at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, tellsย Scripps News. โSo, when I run it through the services that I use for plagiarism detection, it shows up as a zero.โย
Now, a student at Princeton University has created a new tool to combat this form of plagiarism: an app that aims to determine whether text was written by a human or AI. Twenty-two-year-old Edward Tian developed the app, calledย GPTZero, while on winter breakย and unveiled it on January 2. Within the first week of its launch, more than 30,000 people used the tool, perย NPRโs Emma Bowman. On Twitter, it has garnered more than 7 million views.ย
GPTZero uses two variables to determine whether the author of a particular text is human: perplexity, or how complex the writing is, and burstiness, or how variable it is. Text thatโs more complex with varied sentence length tends to be human-written, while prose that is more uniform and familiar to GPTZero tends to be written by AI.
But the app, while almost always accurate, isnโt foolproof. Tian tested it out using BBC articles and text generated by AI when prompted with the same headline. He tellsย BBC Newsโ Nadine Yousif that the app determined the difference with a less than 2 percent false positive rate.
โThis is at the same time a very useful tool for professors, and on the other hand a very dangerous toolโtrusting it too much would lead to exacerbation of the false flags,โ writes one GPTZero user, per theย Guardianโs Caitlin Cassidy.ย
Tian is now working on improving the toolโs accuracy, per NPR. And heโs not alone in his quest to detect plagiarism. OpenAI is also working on ways that ChatGPTโs text can easily be identified.ย
โWe donโt want ChatGPT to be used for misleading purposes in schools or anywhere else,โ a spokesperson for the company tells theย Washington Postโs Susan Svrlugaย in an email, โWeโre already developing mitigations to help anyone identify text generated by that system.โ One such idea is aย watermark, or an unnoticeable signal that accompanies text written by a bot.
Tian says heโs not against artificial intelligence, and heโs even excited about its capabilities, per BBC News. But he wants more transparency surrounding when the technology is used.ย
โA lot of people are like โฆ โYouโre trying to shut down a good thing weโve got going here!โโ he tells thePost. โThatโs not the case. I am not opposed to students using AI where it makes sense. โฆ Itโs just we have to adopt this technology responsibly.โ
Margaret OsborneREAD MORE
Margaret Osborne is a freelance journalist based in the southwestern U.S. Her work has appeared in theย Sag Harbor Expressย and has aired onย WSHU Public Radio.
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