English

A Linguistic Comparison between Human and ChatGPT-Generated Conversations

Computation and Language 2024-04-29 v3 Artificial Intelligence Computers and Society

Abstract

This study explores linguistic differences between human and LLM-generated dialogues, using 19.5K dialogues generated by ChatGPT-3.5 as a companion to the EmpathicDialogues dataset. The research employs Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC) analysis, comparing ChatGPT-generated conversations with human conversations across 118 linguistic categories. Results show greater variability and authenticity in human dialogues, but ChatGPT excels in categories such as social processes, analytical style, cognition, attentional focus, and positive emotional tone, reinforcing recent findings of LLMs being "more human than human." However, no significant difference was found in positive or negative affect between ChatGPT and human dialogues. Classifier analysis of dialogue embeddings indicates implicit coding of the valence of affect despite no explicit mention of affect in the conversations. The research also contributes a novel, companion ChatGPT-generated dataset of conversations between two independent chatbots, which were designed to replicate a corpus of human conversations available for open access and used widely in AI research on language modeling. Our findings enhance understanding of ChatGPT's linguistic capabilities and inform ongoing efforts to distinguish between human and LLM-generated text, which is critical in detecting AI-generated fakes, misinformation, and disinformation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2401.16587,
  title  = {A Linguistic Comparison between Human and ChatGPT-Generated Conversations},
  author = {Morgan Sandler and Hyesun Choung and Arun Ross and Prabu David},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2401.16587},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Pattern Recognition and Artificial Intelligence (ICPRAI), Jeju, Korea, 2024

R2 v1 2026-06-28T14:30:54.351Z