• can@sh.itjust.works
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    23 days ago

    those who used ChatGPT for “personal” reasons — like discussing emotions and memories — were less emotionally dependent upon it than those who used it for “non-personal” reasons, like brainstorming or asking for advice.

    Interesting

    • theunknownmuncher@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      It’s a roundabout way of saying that people who seek AI with this as their explicit goal quickly realize that it sucks for it.

      • gruhuken@slrpnk.net
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        6 days ago

        Currently revising for a psychology exam on human-automation interaction and from what they’ve taught us, this makes a lot of sense because automating skills (like idea generation and decision-making) makes your own skills degrade from lack of use. There’s decades of evidence on pilots’ use of autopilot saying that the ones who lack confidence in their skills use it most. So it’s a vicious cycle. You lack confidence in your ability to make a decision or generate good ideas, so you unload it onto a bot (an unexplainable one whose methods, rationale and evidence is obscured from you) and your skills in the whole decision-making process of researching, evaluating and synthesising evidence begin to decay. And this increases your reliance on the AI to do these things for you. .