Exploring Authorial Voice in the Age of AI
How does AI's text generation ability redefine authorial voice and reshape writing education and creativity?
Dear Amazing Readers,
Your support fuels our mission to explore the frontiers of AI and writing. By pledging just $5 a month or $50 a year, you'll join a community dedicated to understanding the evolving landscape of authorship and creativity. Your subscription not only sustains our work but also grants you exclusive insights and discussions.
Invest in the future of writing. Join us today.
Together, we'll navigate the exciting intersection of human creativity and artificial intelligence.
Nick
I. Introduction
The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence, particularly in natural language processing, has opened up a fascinating realm of questions about the nature of authorship, creativity, and what we rhetorical theorists understand as "authorial voice." Rather than asserting a definitive stance, this paper aims to explore the multifaceted implications of AI's growing capabilities in text generation and style mimicry.
Katherine Elkins and Jon Chun's 2020 study, "Can GPT-3 Pass a Writer's Turing Test?", serves as a compelling starting point for our exploration. Their work examines GPT-3's ability to generate text that is often indistinguishable from human-written prose, even mimicking specific authorial styles. They note:
"GPT-3's ability to generate human-like text raises profound questions about the nature of authorship and creativity in the age of AI. If a machine can produce writing that is indistinguishable from that of a human, what does this mean for our understanding of 'voice' in literature?"
This observation invites us to reconsider our traditional notions of authorial voice. Is voice an innate quality unique to each author, or could it be seen as a set of learnable patterns? How might the ability of AI to mimic and generate distinctive styles influence our understanding of creativity and originality in writing?
To further enrich our exploration, we can consider the perspective of cognitive scientist Douglas Hofstadter. In Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid (1979), Hofstadter suggests that what we perceive as unique human traits, including artistic style, may be complex patterns emerging from simpler, underlying rules:
"The difference between a device which can play superbly but cannot compose at all, and a device which can compose recognizable music in a particular style, may be smaller than one might think."
Hofstadter's insight, when applied to writing, prompts us to question the nature of authorial voice itself. Is there a fundamental difference between mimicking a style and generating original work in that style? How might AI's capabilities in this area reshape our understanding of the creative process?
Introducing Two AI Literacy Courses for Educators
Pragmatic AI for Educators (Pilot Program)
Basic AI classroom tools
Cost: $20
Pragmatic AI Prompting for Advanced Differentiation
Advanced AI skills for tailored instruction
Cost: $200
Free Offer:
30-minute strategy sessions
Tailored course implementation for departments, schools, or districts
Practical steps for AI integration
Interested in enhancing AI literacy in your educational community? Contact nicolas@pragmaticaisolutions.net to schedule a session or learn more.
II. The AI Challenge to "Authentic" Voice
AI's advancing text generation capabilities are challenging our understanding of authorial voice and authenticity. Even as early as GPT-2, AI-generated poems began capturing elements of John Donne's style - including rhythm, rhyme schemes, and complex metaphors - prompting experts to reconsider how we identify genuine historical works.
This achievement prompts us to question the very nature of style and voice in literature. If an AI can convincingly adopt the voice of a 17th-century poet, what does this reveal about the components of authorial voice? Is voice simply a set of identifiable patterns, or is there an ineffable quality that eludes algorithmic reproduction?
James Phelan's work on narrative theory offers a thought-provoking perspective. In his 2014 paper, he argues:
"Voice in narrative is not simply a matter of style or technique, but a complex rhetorical phenomenon that emerges from the interaction between author, text, and reader."
Phelan's view invites us to consider voice as something that exists not just in the text, but in the space between author and reader. This raises intriguing questions about AI's ability to truly capture voice. If voice emerges from rhetorical interaction, can an AI genuinely replicate this dynamic, or is it merely simulating surface-level features?
These considerations lead us more globally to reexamine the concept of authenticity in writing. In an era where AI can generate text indistinguishable from human-written work, how do we define authentic voice? Is authenticity tied to the origin of the text, or is it more about the effect the text has on the reader? Moreover, how does awareness of AI's capabilities change our perception of authenticity?
III. Education, AI, and Voice Formation
As we consider the impact of AI on authorial voice, we must also examine the crucial role of education in shaping writers' voices and how this process is being challenged and potentially transformed by AI technologies.
Traditionally, writing education has focused on helping students develop their "authentic voice" through practice, imitation, and eventual innovation. However, the integration of AI writing tools into both educational and professional settings raises profound questions about this process.
Joseph E. Aoun, in his book Robot-Proof: Higher Education in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (2017), argues:
"In an AI-driven world, education must focus on that which is uniquely human: creativity, critical thinking, and emotional intelligence."
Aoun's perspective invites us to consider: If AI can competently handle many aspects of writing, from grammar correction to style imitation, how should writing education evolve? Should we double down on cultivating "human" aspects of writing, or should we embrace AI as a collaborative tool in the writing process?
The use of AI writing tools in education adds complexity to our understanding of authorial voice. Some educators argue these tools, by handling technical aspects, could free students to focus on ideas and personal expression. This challenges traditional views on developing writing skills and authentic voice.
Key questions emerge:
Does AI assistance with mechanics liberate students to focus on higher-order writing aspects?
Or does bypassing technical struggles hinder crucial voice development?
Moreover, AI's role in writing education prompts us to reconsider instructional goals. In a world where AI can generate diverse styles, should we shift from cultivating distinctive voices to teaching effective AI collaboration while maintaining human creativity?
IV. Educational Institutions Grappling with AI and Authentic Voice
As AI writing tools become increasingly sophisticated and accessible, educational institutions find themselves at a crossroads. The challenge is not merely technological but deeply philosophical: How do we foster authentic voice and original thought in an era where AI can generate convincing academic prose?
Some institutions have unwisely responded with outright bans on AI writing tools. However, this approach raises its own set of questions. As noted by Lee Skallerup Bessette, a digital learning specialist at Georgetown University:
"Banning these tools may provide a quick fix, but it doesn't address the larger issue of how AI is reshaping the way we think about writing and creativity. We need to teach students how to use these tools critically and ethically."
Bessette's perspective challenges us to consider: Are prohibitive policies merely delaying an inevitable integration of AI into the writing process? Should we instead focus on developing new pedagogical approaches that incorporate AI as a tool for enhancing, rather than replacing, human creativity?
This line of thinking aligns with the concept of "AI-augmented learning" proposed by Michelle Zimmerman in her book Teaching AI: Exploring New Frontiers for Learning (2018). Zimmerman argues:
"Rather than viewing AI as a threat, we should see it as an opportunity to redefine literacy. In an AI-augmented classroom, the focus shifts from rote learning to developing higher-order thinking skills and creativity."
Such curricular pathways suggest the intriguing possibility that one's higher-order thinking processes possess a unique cognitive signature, akin to an authentic voice. However, at present, we lack the sophisticated assessment tools necessary to measure and validate these distinctive mental fingerprints.
V. The Multifaceted Voice: Human and Machine Collaboration
As we venture further into the realm of AI-assisted writing, we encounter a fascinating evolution of authorial voice—one that emerges from the collaborative interplay between human creativity and machine intelligence. This partnership challenges our traditional notions of voice and invites us to consider new dimensions of textual creation and interpretation.
James Phelan's work in rhetorical narratology provides a useful framework for examining this collaboration. In Somebody Telling Somebody Else: A Rhetorical Poetics of Narrative (2017), Phelan argues:
"Voice in narrative is not a static quality but a dynamic interaction between the author, the text, and the reader. It's a communicative act that unfolds in the process of storytelling and interpretation."
Phelan's perspective prompts us to ask: How does the introduction of AI into this communicative act reshape the dynamics of voice? If voice emerges from interaction, how do we understand a voice that is co-created by human and machine?
This question becomes even more intriguing when we consider the findings of Clark et al. in their 2018 study "Creative Writing with a Machine in the Loop":
"We observed that writers working with AI assistance often produced texts that were stylistically distinct from both their usual writing and the AI's output alone. This suggests a new form of hybrid voice emerging from the human-AI collaboration."
Clark's observation challenges us to reconsider the nature of authorial adaptability. Traditionally, we've understood writers as adapting their voice across different contexts and genres. But in the age of AI collaboration, are we witnessing the emergence of a new kind of adaptability—one that involves not just shifting between human-generated styles, but fluidly integrating machine-generated elements?
This shift in perspective aligns with the ideas proposed by Marcus du Sautoy in his book The Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI (2019):
"The future of creativity may not be about humans versus machines, but humans and machines working together to explore new realms of creative possibility."
Du Sautoy's vision prompts us to consider: How might this collaborative creativity reshape our literary landscape? Could we see the emergence of new genres or forms that are uniquely suited to human-AI co-creation?
VI. Redefining Creativity in AI-Assisted Writing
As AI continues to evolve and integrate into the writing process, we find ourselves at a crossroads that challenges our fundamental understanding of creativity and authorial voice. This final frontier in our exploration invites us to reconsider what it means to be creative and to have a distinct voice in an age where machines can generate, manipulate, and even innovate with language.
Mark O. Riedl, in his 2019 paper "Human‐Centered Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning," offers a provocative perspective:
"As AI systems become more capable of generating human-like creative content, we must shift our focus from seeing AI as a tool to seeing it as a collaborative partner in the creative process. This shift requires us to redefine not just how we create, but what we consider to be creative."
Riedl's observation prompts us to question: Does the involvement of AI in the writing process diminish human creativity, or does it open up new avenues for creative expression? Perhaps creativity in the AI age is less about generating entirely original content and more about the unique ways in which humans direct, curate, and synthesize AI-generated material.
This idea of human-AI creative collaboration is further explored in the work of Enrique Manjavacas et al. in their 2017 study "Synthetic Literature: Writing Science Fiction in a Co-Creative Process":
"Our experiments with AI co-authors revealed that human writers often found themselves exploring narrative possibilities they hadn't previously considered. The AI didn't replace human creativity but seemed to extend it in unexpected directions."
Manjavacas's findings challenge us to reconsider the nature of inspiration and originality. If AI can prompt writers to explore new creative territories, is the resulting work any less authentic or valuable than one created without AI assistance? Moreover, could this human-AI collaboration lead to entirely new forms of literature that wouldn't be possible through human effort alone?
Margaret A. Boden, in her book Creativity and Art: Three Roads to Surprise (2010), offers a framework that might help us navigate these questions:
"Creativity can be understood as the exploration and transformation of conceptual spaces. AI doesn't just assist in this exploration; it can potentially expand the conceptual spaces themselves, allowing for forms of creativity that we can't yet imagine."
Boden's perspective challenges us to think beyond our current understanding of creativity. As AI continues to evolve, could it lead to entirely new forms of creative expression that transcend our traditional categories of literature, poetry, or even language itself?
As we conclude our exploration, we must return to the central question of authorial voice. Perhaps, in the age of AI, authorial voice is not diminished but rather expanded and redefined. It may no longer be solely about the words on the page, but about the unique way each author interfaces with AI tools, the choices they make in directing and curating AI-generated content, and the distinctive cognitive processes they bring to the collaborative act of creation.
In this light, authorial voice becomes a meta-skill – the ability to orchestrate a symphony of human and machine-generated elements into a coherent and compelling whole. It's the author's unique fingerprint on the process of creation, rather than just the product. This evolving concept of voice encompasses not only writing style but also the author's approach to leveraging AI, their critical thinking in selecting and refining AI outputs, and their creativity in combining human and machine-generated ideas.
As we move forward, the challenge – and the opportunity – lies in developing new frameworks to understand, nurture, and appreciate this expanded notion of authorial voice. It invites us to reconsider our approaches to writing education, literary criticism, and even the way we conceive of authorship itself. In doing so, we may discover that AI, far from erasing individual voice, actually provides a new canvas on which authors can express their unique creative vision.
Nick Potkalitsky, Ph.D.
References:
Aoun, J. E. (2017). Robot-Proof: Higher Education in the Age of Artificial Intelligence. MIT Press.
Bender, E., & Koller, A. (2020). “Climbing towards NLU: On Meaning, Form, and Understanding in the Age of Data.” Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 5185-5198.
Boden, M. A. (2010). Creativity and Art: Three Roads to Surprise. Oxford University Press.
Clark, E., Ross, A. S., Tan, C., Ji, Y., & Smith, N. A. (2018). “Creative Writing with a Machine in the Loop: Case Studies on Slogans and Stories.” 23rd International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces (IUI '18), 329-340.
Du Sautoy, M. (2019). The Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI. Harvard University Press.
Elkins, K., & Chun, J. (2020). “Can GPT-3 Pass a Writer's Turing Test? Journal of Cultural Analytics”, 5(1).
Hofstadter, D. (1979). Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid. Basic Books.
Manjavacas, E., Karsdorp, F., Burtenshaw, B., & Kestemont, M. (2017). “Synthetic Literature: Writing Science Fiction in a Co-Creative Process.” Proceedings of the Workshop on Computational Creativity in Natural Language Generation, 29-37.
Phelan, J. (2014). “Voice, Tone, and the Rhetoric of Narrative Communication.” Language and Literature, 23(1), 49-60.
Phelan, J. (2017). Somebody Telling Somebody Else: A Rhetorical Poetics of Narrative. Ohio State University Press.
Riedl, M. O. (2019). “Human‐Centered Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning. Human Behavior and Emerging Technologies,” 1(1), 33-42.
Zimmerman, M. (2018). “Teaching AI: Exploring New Frontiers for Learning.” ISTE.
Check out some of my favorite Substacks:
Terry Underwood’s Learning to Read, Reading to Learn: The most penetrating investigation of the intersections between compositional theory, literacy studies, and AI on the internet!!!
Suzi’s When Life Gives You AI: An cutting-edge exploration of the intersection among computer science, neuroscience, and philosophy
Alejandro Piad Morffis’s Mostly Harmless Ideas: Unmatched investigations into coding, machine learning, computational theory, and practical AI applications
Amrita Roy’s The Pragmatic Optimist: My favorite Substack that focuses on economics and market trends.
Michael Woudenberg’s Polymathic Being: Polymathic wisdom brought to you every Sunday morning with your first cup of coffee
Rob Nelson’s AI Log: Incredibly deep and insightful essay about AI’s impact on higher ed, society, and culture.
Michael Spencer’s AI Supremacy: The most comprehensive and current analysis of AI news and trends, featuring numerous intriguing guest posts
Daniel Bashir’s The Gradient Podcast: The top interviews with leading AI experts, researchers, developers, and linguists.
Daniel Nest’s Why Try AI?: The most amazing updates on AI tools and techniques
Riccardo Vocca’s The Intelligent Friend: An intriguing examination of the diverse ways AI is transforming our lives and the world around us.
Jason Gulya’s The AI Edventure: An important exploration of cutting edge innovations in AI-responsive curriculum and pedagogy.
Voice in writing in my thinking is a metaphor with a literal and figurative aspect. While written words don't produce sound, readers often say they "hear" the text in their minds. This internal vocalization could be the origin of the metaphor. A ubiquitous experience for mature readers, this inner voice may be a necessary but insufficient part of comprehension and interpretation.
Like spoken language, written text has patterns of stress, pauses, and flow that conventionally signal vocal qualities. Prosody, the intonation contours of spoken utterances cued by grammar and punctuation, is important for a) serving as a resource for the writer who must make sense of sentences for themselves as part of writing (conventional wisdom to writers: read your text out loud) and b) being a cueing system for syntactic support for readers. Spelling, punctuation, and formatting can guide readers on how words might be spoken aloud.
Figurative aspects of voice abound I think because readers often perceive a presence or a persona they construct from stylistic elements. I use the notion of “style” as a tangible idea for emerging writers. Chicken comes breaded and deep fried, broiled, roasted, baked, grilled, stuffed, shredded, ground and formed into burgers—it’s all chicken until style enters the picture to remake it to represent the chef’s “voice” for the occasion.
A writer's "voice" represents their unique style, perspective, and character that come through in their writing. I gotta be me goes the song. The overall mood or attitude conveyed in the writing by word choices, sentence emphasis, level of formality, etc. are proxies for the raw brute gutturals and whispers of a speaking presence.
A strong writing voice is cultivated by consciously designing a text to convey a certain persona, using expertise to build credibility, similar to how we associate certain vocal qualities with authority in speech. Learning to write with a controlled voice takes place when the writer gets feedback from a reader. Just as people have unique vocal characteristics, writers develop recognizable styles that set them apart.
A genuine writing voice judged so by a reader feels true to the author, much like how we associate a person's speaking voice with their authentic self. This figurative aspect is ironic in that human subjective responses to “voice” are sometimes tough to validate with either spoken or textual evidence. We feel it, baby, we believe it. So a critical stance toward perception of voice trumps a naive stance.
The metaphor of "voice" in writing works because it captures both the technical aspects of how spoken language communicates the abstract qualities of personal expression and communication and the compositional of written text. It bridges the gap between the physical act of speaking and the cognitive process of reading, helping us understand written communication in terms of a familiar, embodied experience.
I’ve always had more success in teaching the concept of voice by focusing on developing a “reader’s voice.” Raising awareness of what writers do to cue a particular “presence” isn’t amenable to multiple choice testing because it is both predictable and idiosyncratic. How we talk about a text’s presence with others is our “reader’s voice” in mature form speaking back to the text. Opportunities for open discussions of powerful texts can exercise the reader’s voice and stock a toolkit for writers to draw on.
Speaking voices are very difficult to fake. This point explains why actors and public speakers have to work so hard to come across as genuine. Legal settings rely on spoken testimony for this very reason.
Relying on a routine speaking voice is a baseline for most novice writers. The art of writing often means putting on a face and creating print that “speaks” to readers as the writer intends. AI as a machine has the potential to serve as a tool for a writer to craft an intended voice. Once readers understand that writers create voices because both readers and writers can speak in the moment under the power of human intelligence, AI is no longer a threat.
That’s my story and I’m sticking to it:)
Quarts crysalline meican dimond crystal