Interpretative Interfaces: Designing for AI-Mediated Reading Practices and the Knowledge Commons
Gabrielle Benabdallah

TL;DR
This paper advocates for interpretative interfaces that enable users to interact with AI models' internal representations, fostering deeper understanding and engagement beyond mere explanations, especially for scientific reading practices.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach shifting from explainability to interpretative engagement by designing interfaces that allow manipulation of language models' internal states.
Findings
Proposes interactive environments for exploring model token trajectories.
Enables users to annotate and manipulate internal representations.
Supports critical engagement with AI-generated scientific texts.
Abstract
Explainable AI (XAI) interfaces seek to make large language models more transparent, yet explanation alone does not produce understanding. Explaining a system's behavior is not the same as being able to engage with it, to probe and interpret its operations through direct manipulation. This distinction matters for scientific disciplines in particular: scientists who increasingly rely on LLMs for reading, citing, and producing literature reviews have little means of directly engaging with how these models process and transform the texts they generate. In this ongoing design research project, I argue for a shift from explainability to interpretative engagement. This shift moves away from accounts of system behavior to instead enable users to manipulate a model's intermediate representations. Drawing on textual scholarship, computational poetics, and the history of reading and writing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsExplainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) · Digital Humanities and Scholarship · AI in Service Interactions
