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Digital skills

Chatbots

There are a wide variety of AI tools available to use, covering a wide range of functions, and the number is growing all the time. This page is therefore not intended to be an exhaustive list of AI chatbots, but an overview of the most common / popular ones and ones you may be recommended.

As always please remember AI use is determined by your course, so check with your lecturer and assignment brief before utilising any AI tools. 

Please also be aware of issues surrounding data protection and AI. There are ongoing concerns over data protection when using AI tools. This is because there is no way of knowing what information may be stored and used in training the AI tool.  Therefore do not share any confidential or private information about yourself or others. Do check if there is an option opt out of data collection. 

Avoid using your student email address to register for non-work-related websites and systems. Where this is unavoidable never use your student password. If an external website is compromised your credentials may be stolen and used to gain access to ECA-HE College systems.

 

What is a prompt?

A prompt is a form of interaction between a human and a large language model. This could be a question, a statement or instruction. The more detailed prompts receive better responses. Please see the page on using AI ethically for more information on how to create prompts. 

Microsoft Copilot

Microsoft Copilot is an AI tool designed by Microsoft and part of Bing. There are two versions; the web version and a version built into Microsoft 365. Students and staff at the University only have access to the web version. 

Microsoft Copilot essentially works like ChatGPT or Google Bard and can;

  • Answer questions
  • Create text 
  • Create tables

And more. For a comprehensive list of features, see the Microsoft website

Chat GPT 3.5

ChatGPT3.5 is an LLM designed as a chatbot; it allows you to have human like conversations and can do things like answer questions and compose text such as emails, code or essays. 

One of the things to remember with ChatGPT (and other Large Language Models) is that they do not 'understand' in a traditional sense. Using data it has gathered, it is 'guessing' what the most likely series of words will be in an answer, based on the prompt you have put in. 

Limitations of ChatGPT

  • The program can create sentences that do not make sense
  • It is very dependent on the prompt; slightly different prompts can give wildly different results. It also does not ask clarifying questions.
  • If used for academic writing such as essays, it has been know to invent citations and references that do not exist SO you will still have to use the Library and Summon to find academic resources
  • The current version only runs of data collected until January 2022 (correct as of December 2023). This means there is a large amount of information potentially missing dependent on search.

Gemini

Google Gemini is an experimental chatbot developed by Google, which works much like ChatGpt. You can use Bard to;

  • Answer questions
  • Generate content
  • Provide tips and ideas
  • Summarize text and data
  • Change the tone of your writing
  • Translate language

It does come with the same potential issues as ChatGPT, but one advantage is that as it runs from Google, it harvests data in real time, as opposed to ChatGPT which was last updated in 2021. 

Get started with Google Gemini here. 

 

Consensus AI-powered Academic Search Engine

Consensus AI is an AI-driven search engine that specializes in extracting and condensing scientific insights from peer-reviewed sources. The goal is to democratize access to expert knowledge and make science more approachable

Get started with Consensus here. 

 

* Information courtesy of University of Huddersfield

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