The speed of change splintered Gen Z into micro-generations
Rapid change is splitting it into smaller, experience-driven cohorts that marketers can’t ignore.
The New York Times AI·
A new study from Gallup found that young adults have grown less hopeful and more angry about artificial intelligence.
Read full articleRapid change is splitting it into smaller, experience-driven cohorts that marketers can’t ignore.
New research suggests that reliance on AI assistants can have a negative impact on people’s ability to think and problem solve.
The retracted study on ChatGPT in education was already cited hundreds of times.
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It's been almost three years since Silicon Valley started aggressively pushing large language model-based chatbots like ChatGPT as the supposedly inevitable future of everything, and there's no group that has felt the pressure quite like Gen Z. Like with many tech trends before it, it's no surprise that young people are among the biggest adopters of AI chatbot tools. But contrary to the tales spun by tech companies like OpenAI and Google, polling data shows that Gen Z students and workers are a big part of the wider cultural backlash against AI. And even as they utilize these tools, vast swaths of young people are deeply acrimonious and eve … Read the full story at The Verge.
Week #592