Kids learn language from peers in real life and virtual peers on social media | game forums | twitch | etc.
There's more and more ChatGPT type text upvoted on social media, which is hardly surprising as it was partly trained on 'peak' zeitgeist responses, this influences real world children who influence each other.
Kids pick up new language patterns and use them all the time. I have a young friend whom I can always tell has been hanging around with someone new, or has become a fan of someone new, because of all the new lingo and colloquialisms that suddenly spews forth.
I don’t think this is unique to children. I know many adults that do this (and I admit to be guilty of it too). It’s even fun to see how long it takes for you to introduce a new phrase or similar before it gets picked up by people and you.
Oh, my wife of 18 years - I can tell when she's got a new co-worker or some new person to talk to when I'm not around. She starts using words that isn't part of her usual vocabulary.
ChatGPT is the next TikTok, in that it will widely influence what the next generation thinks and does. Just wait until advertisers, ideologues, and governments sink their teeth into it to manipulate it, and your kids, for their benefit.
I think there is a more obvious influence on “formal” communication: Google’s smart compose and smart reply.
Students writing papers now increasingly use Google Docs as Google pushes into the education space, and Google workspace has 9 million paying orgs. It seems possible that being consistently exposed to the same models/suggestions in school and then work (the main “formal” contexts for most) could have a drastic impact on professional communication.
I’d be interested to see someone study an organization’s language before and after adopting Google’s products to see what, if any, influence it has.
I was thinking about this the other day what the long term etymological implications of LLMs will be. The wording, grammar, slang etc. Will be forever melded from now on with the meat and digital. In linguistic history this may be seen as profound a change as writing, the printing press and internet.
It feels like I can’t read a comment thread, Reddit post, etc. anymore without someone accusing someone else of posting ChatGPT content. The accusations are almost always baseless in my limited experience.
Reading this, I can’t help but wonder if the author is just one of those people interacting with the real world.
The author is Spanish. I've noticed lots of ESL people using CGPT to polish their English, or to write their thoughts in their native language and translate them, and it all ends up coming out with corporate-robotic accent.
Doesn't bother me too much though, just a side effect of the English lingua franca. I bet my ChatGPT-translated Chinese has a rigid formality to it as well.
Why were there no examples in this post? Just vague references. Pretty unconvincing, especially since the son is 14 years old, an age of massive change.
I’m not doubting that ChatGPT, like many technologies before it, will change language, but this post leaves too much to the imagination.
Noam Chomsky famously discovered that the building blocks of language are preloaded into the human mind, children use a hypothetical tool called the Language Acquisition Device to quickly learn grammar even with little input. I wonder is this a genetic device or something of a quantum nature?
Reaffirms my determination to avoid all those cute custom, AI-generated stories services for my little kid, and to be very careful about other superficially child-safe media. He’s at a point where he’s latching on to phrases and repeating them, even weeks later.
ChatGPT formality as another flavor for code switching. I could see it. Good or bad? I think it's good if they're testing how to be persuasive and if it works.
Conspicuous absence of evidence or even specifics of what the author thinks “sounding like ChatGPT”. I personally wouldn’t characterise it as “robotic” or akin to a trope-y robotic character (Jane from the Good Place).
But credulously taking claims at face value, structure and clarity is a good thing for a teenager’s expository writing.
I've noticed this in myself since long before ChatGPT was a twinkle in Sam Altmans eye. It was more about reading/writing more frequently than listening/talking.
Writing tools do influence expression. I recall Jerry Pournelle saying how using an early mobile computer with its 40 character screen width had made his sentences shorter. Others I have worked with have mentioned how Microsoft Word’s built in thesaurus not only influenced their word choice, but that that choice dated the writing to a specific version of Word.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 70.8 ms ] threadKids learn language from peers in real life and virtual peers on social media | game forums | twitch | etc.
There's more and more ChatGPT type text upvoted on social media, which is hardly surprising as it was partly trained on 'peak' zeitgeist responses, this influences real world children who influence each other.
TikTok just got caught stealing ChatGPT.
YOU’VE JUST BEEN FUCKED BY PSYOPS https://media.ccc.de/v/f7375255-379f-4423-a47f-2920246a0916
Edit: also HN discussion for said talk https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38791575
Students writing papers now increasingly use Google Docs as Google pushes into the education space, and Google workspace has 9 million paying orgs. It seems possible that being consistently exposed to the same models/suggestions in school and then work (the main “formal” contexts for most) could have a drastic impact on professional communication.
I’d be interested to see someone study an organization’s language before and after adopting Google’s products to see what, if any, influence it has.
Reading this, I can’t help but wonder if the author is just one of those people interacting with the real world.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UoDlxQ7YDzc
https://www.science.org/content/article/are-these-dots-purpl...
https://github.com/ultralytics/ultralytics/issues/5748#issue...
If you read the answers there, the style of answering is always to repeat the question in a very specific way. Once you see it you can’t in-see it.
Doesn't bother me too much though, just a side effect of the English lingua franca. I bet my ChatGPT-translated Chinese has a rigid formality to it as well.
The rest of us get a 13 year old that sounds like TikTok and a 6 year old that sounds like Fortnite.
I’m not doubting that ChatGPT, like many technologies before it, will change language, but this post leaves too much to the imagination.
“Discovered” seems to misrepresent the evidentiary basis for Chomsky’s Universal Grammar.
Not useful for business emails that have to be concise to stand any hope of being read and understood.
It took years to rewire myself.
Is something I saw my coworker type out in full when starting an internal email to a colleague the could have been confined to just the subject.
The person whose full name is in the "From:" field of this email
taught me a thing or two about leading with what matters.
Frustrating.
Everybody in the company wants him to be effective.
Least we can do is to make our point in the first sentence.
When it’s a client it’s important to establish service standards and boundaries, otherwise they become your boss, not a client.
Speaking of faces in spaces, is there an equivalent to Eigenfaces in linguistics?
I suggest Eigenbabbles.
Yes, this post is self-referential.
But credulously taking claims at face value, structure and clarity is a good thing for a teenager’s expository writing.