ChatGPT not only helps write reports, plan or create content quickly. Another silent but more obvious impact is that AI is affecting the way we talk every day, but many people are not paying attention.
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development (berlin, Germany) analyzed more than 280,000 academic videos on YouTube and discovered that since ChatGPT became popular, some typical phrases of AI such as exploring new fields, becoming proficient or deep-iding the problem have appeared increasingly dense.
It is worth mentioning that this is not the content of chatbot, but the words of real people, who are unconsciously "imitating" AI language.
Not only in academics, this phenomenon also penetrates into meeting rooms, classrooms, and even family conversations.
City-france, reasonable statements that listen to be smart are gradually replacing familiar, unique, and rich local expressions. This raises concerns: is the personal voice gradually being flattened by AI?
Language is a tool to express the identity, origin and view of each person. When everyone starts to talk about flowing energy according to "AI standards", we are at risk of losing diversity and uniqueness, which is often the thing that communication becomes lively and memorable.
Another consequence is a change in communication attitude. talking to AI with words like thank you and thank you can make us behave more properly in real life. On the other hand, the familiarity with stuck, straightforward speech when communicating with machines can also reduce the humanity in real interaction.
However, it is hard to deny the convenience that ChatGPT brings. But that is why users need to be more alert. If we are too dependent, AIs prose can engthen in writing and speaking, making us confused, as if the whole world is using the same dictionary.
Language has changed with the internet, iconography and social networks. Now, artificial intelligence is a new wave, quietly shaping the way people speak - not because it is better, but because it is too familiar with the hand.
Perhaps, it is time for everyone to stop, listen to their own voice and preserve a little "quality of the people" in the machine age.