@NotebookLM is insane/underrated. Cinematic mode has some creative muscle that genuinely surprised me
was researching the socratic method, loaded up a notebook w a bunch of primary sources, conjured this
struck by the styling & cited images, despite a few hilarious fails
“YEAH SO AI THERAPY IS SO ALLURING BECAUSE IT COLLUDES WITH THE VERY DEFENSES THAT YOU’RE TRYING TO DISMANTLE! MOST OF OUR PROBLEMS ARE ULTIMATELY RELATIONSHIP PROBLEMS AND WITHOUT A REAL RELATIONSHIP WITH ANOTHER HUMAN BEING YOU’RE LIKELY TO REINFORCE DEEPLY ENGRAINED PATTERNS THAT ARE NO LONGER SERVING YOU!”
@DoctorPerin With enough commitment, diligent output and striking the right gap in the culture, I would argue that public commentary (newsletter, podcast, courses, books, etc) is the play here. The gamble is chasing eyeballs in a maelstrom of content - humor that lands is a key differentiator
I don’t know what to do about my ambivalent dependence and resentment of these tools.
My piece appears in the latest report from APsA’s Council on Artificial Intelligence. You can read it here: https://t.co/P4HDHe8qly
There’s something dangerously seductive about having a perfectly attentive audience that never gets bored (or appears not to), never misunderstands (or appears not to).
A thing I wrote for @psychoanalysis_ examines the alluring fantasy that AI can improve one’s writing.
I’m an anxious, insecure writer. When LLMs became available, I thought they would help me overcome my difficulties with communicating to the world. But it’s not that simple.
When I submit my half-formed thoughts to a chatbot, something essential about *me* gets lost.
Among experienced psychologists and psychiatrists, there is a remarkable level of empirical agreement about the qualities that define healthy psychological functioning*
@therapiworks I adored this short story collection, but i am an unabashed Saunders stan — ch 4 “a thing at work” is absolutely hysterical and devastating
Just as personality tests (see, I’m an introvert!), astrological signs (I’m a Libra!), and generational monikers (I’m Gen Z!) are used to aid self-understanding, so are psychiatric diagnoses, @mnvrsngh writes. https://t.co/BuHSEFDp57