What Influences Readers' and Writers' Perceived Necessity of AI Disclosure?
Jingchao Fang, Victoria Xiaohan Wen, and Mina Lee

TL;DR
This study investigates factors influencing perceptions of AI disclosure necessity among readers and writers, revealing differences based on AI's role, intentionality, and use context through a vignette survey.
Contribution
It uncovers contrasting perceptions of AI disclosure necessity between readers and writers, highlighting key procedural factors affecting these judgments.
Findings
Readers find disclosure more necessary than writers.
AI's irreplaceability and direct use increase perceived necessity.
Writers' intentionality affects perceptions differently for readers and writers.
Abstract
The growing capability of artificial intelligence (AI) leads to its increasing adoption in writing, spurring discussions around whether writers should disclose their AI use in writing. What influences the perceived necessity of disclosure? We look into this question from three dimensions: perspective (reader or writer of the text), purpose (the goal of reading or writing), and procedural factors (how AI was used in the writing process in terms of replaceability, effortfulness, intentionality, and directness). In a vignette study (N = 727), we find that readers consider disclosure to be more necessary than writers, and disclosure is regarded as more necessary when AI's contribution in writing is irreplaceable, directly incorporated, and when the writer does not intentionally steer AI generation. To our surprise, the writers' intentionality of AI use produces contrasting effects on…
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