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Edward Tian, a college student studying computer science and journalism at Princeton University, recently created an app called GPTZero to help detect whether the text was written by AI or a human. The motivation behind the app was to help combat increasing AI plagiarism.
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To analyze text, GPTZero uses metrics such as perplexity and burstiness. Perplexity measures how complex the text is, while burstiness measures how randomly it is written. This allows GPTZero to accurately detect whether an essay was written by a human or by ChatGPT.
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Of course universities are working along with AI developments instead of trying to stop them: University students are using AI to write essays. Teachers are learning how to embrace that
Edit 16/7/23 – Of course you have GPT minus 1 which takes your GPT output and scrambles it so that these GPT checkers can’t recognise it any more
Robin Edgar
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