Current:Home > NewsA college student created an app that can tell whether AI wrote an essay -MoneyStream
A college student created an app that can tell whether AI wrote an essay
View
Date:2025-04-16 22:31:57
Teachers worried about students turning in essays written by a popular artificial intelligence chatbot now have a new tool of their own.
Edward Tian, a 22-year-old senior at Princeton University, has built an app to detect whether text is written by ChatGPT, the viral chatbot that's sparked fears over its potential for unethical uses in academia.
Tian, a computer science major who is minoring in journalism, spent part of his winter break creating GPTZero, which he said can "quickly and efficiently" decipher whether a human or ChatGPT authored an essay.
His motivation to create the bot was to fight what he sees as an increase in AI plagiarism. Since the release of ChatGPT in late November, there have been reports of students using the breakthrough language model to pass off AI-written assignments as their own.
"there's so much chatgpt hype going around. is this and that written by AI? we as humans deserve to know!" Tian wrote in a tweet introducing GPTZero.
Tian said many teachers have reached out to him after he released his bot online on Jan. 2, telling him about the positive results they've seen from testing it.
More than 30,000 people had tried out GPTZero within a week of its launch. It was so popular that the app crashed. Streamlit, the free platform that hosts GPTZero, has since stepped in to support Tian with more memory and resources to handle the web traffic.
How GPTZero works
To determine whether an excerpt is written by a bot, GPTZero uses two indicators: "perplexity" and "burstiness." Perplexity measures the complexity of text; if GPTZero is perplexed by the text, then it has a high complexity and it's more likely to be human-written. However, if the text is more familiar to the bot — because it's been trained on such data — then it will have low complexity and therefore is more likely to be AI-generated.
Separately, burstiness compares the variations of sentences. Humans tend to write with greater burstiness, for example, with some longer or complex sentences alongside shorter ones. AI sentences tend to be more uniform.
In a demonstration video, Tian compared the app's analysis of a story in The New Yorker and a LinkedIn post written by ChatGPT. It successfully distinguished writing by a human versus AI.
Tian acknowledged that his bot isn't foolproof, as some users have reported when putting it to the test. He said he's still working to improve the model's accuracy.
But by designing an app that sheds some light on what separates human from AI, the tool helps work toward a core mission for Tian: bringing transparency to AI.
"For so long, AI has been a black box where we really don't know what's going on inside," he said. "And with GPTZero, I wanted to start pushing back and fighting against that."
The quest to curb AI plagiarism
The college senior isn't alone in the race to rein in AI plagiarism and forgery. OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, has signaled a commitment to preventing AI plagiarism and other nefarious applications. Last month, Scott Aaronson, a researcher currently focusing on AI safety at OpenAI, revealed that the company has been working on a way to "watermark" GPT-generated text with an "unnoticeable secret signal" to identify its source.
The open-source AI community Hugging Face has put out a tool to detect whether text was created by GPT-2, an earlier version of the AI model used to make ChatGPT. A philosophy professor in South Carolina who happened to know about the tool said he used it to catch a student submitting AI-written work.
The New York City education department said on Thursday that it's blocking access to ChatGPT on school networks and devices over concerns about its "negative impacts on student learning, and concerns regarding the safety and accuracy of content."
Tian is not opposed to the use of AI tools like ChatGPT.
GPTZero is "not meant to be a tool to stop these technologies from being used," he said. "But with any new technologies, we need to be able to adopt it responsibly and we need to have safeguards."
veryGood! (1765)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- US Asians and Pacific Islanders view democracy with concern, AP-NORC/AAPI Data poll shows
- Man charged in double murder of Florida newlyweds, called pastor and confessed: Officials
- A Chicago train operator knew snow equipment was on the line but braked immediately, review finds
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Iran executes man convicted of killing a senior cleric following months of unrest
- College football underclassmen who intend to enter 2024 NFL draft
- How to clean suede shoes at home without ruining them
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- New Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk is sworn in with his government
Ranking
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Football player Matt Araiza dropped from woman’s rape lawsuit and won’t sue for defamation
- Pew survey: YouTube tops teens’ social-media diet, with roughly a sixth using it almost constantly
- Missiles from rebel territory in Yemen miss a ship near the key Bab el-Mandeb Strait
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Are post offices, banks, shipping services open on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day 2023?
- How rich is Harvard? It's bigger than the economies of 120 nations.
- Attacks on health care are on track to hit a record high in 2023. Can it be stopped?
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Russian man who flew on Los Angeles flight without passport or ticket charged with federal crime
Auto union boss urges New Jersey lawmakers to pass casino smoking ban
DeSantis goes after Trump on abortion, COVID-19 and the border wall in an Iowa town hall
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
House set for key vote on Biden impeachment inquiry as Republicans unite behind investigation
Climate talks end on a first-ever call for the world to move away from fossil fuels
Why Julia Roberts calls 'Pretty Woman'-inspired anniversary gift on 'RHOBH' 'very strange'