Field Notes
On the Frontier

This is a living laboratory. It features experiments in human-AI collaboration, creativity, and business management.

Spotting AI Writing Ticks in Fiction Drafts
Alex LeClair Alex LeClair

Spotting AI Writing Ticks in Fiction Drafts

Thinking of this particular quirk, I suspect it’s because of a lack of dramatic action or emotion. The character is not doing anything other than noticing and thinking, nor does she have any emotion to play off of other than her own desire to suppress her emotions. And in order to make this moment somehow feel important (or deeper), the AI leans on this quirk of the character noticing something and filing it away, a kind of office-like rendering of the act of repression.

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When AI Starts Writing in Circles
Alex LeClair Alex LeClair

When AI Starts Writing in Circles

My on-going theory is that AI will write laughable sentences when it is struggling to find interesting things to say. And that’s because the planning is off. The drama has dried up. The characters have flattened. The juice—if it ever existed—has been squeezed out of your story.

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The Trouble With Elara: Using AI for Fantasy Character Names
Alex LeClair Alex LeClair

The Trouble With Elara: Using AI for Fantasy Character Names

If you’re writing a fantasy (or a romantasy), A.I. loves to suggest the names Elara, Lyra, Silas, Elias, and Kaelen, among others. I asked A.I. to list the most common names that A.I. provides for fantasy characters and Silas was listed twice. That’s how common it is. Any surname will likely have “Thorne” or “Black” or “Wood” or “Vance” in the name. Stay away from these.

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