Dramaturgies of Deception: AI Humanizers and the Performance of Legitimacy in Higher Education Assessment
Jasper Roe (1), Mike Perkins (2), Peter Bannister (3), Leon Furze (4), James Wood (1) ((1) Durham University, United Kingdom, (2) British University Vietnam, Vietnam, (3) International University of La Rioja, Spain, (4) Deakin University, Australia)

TL;DR
This paper investigates AI humanizer websites in higher education, revealing their role in performative assessment cycles and arguing for structural reforms over technological fixes.
Contribution
It provides a systematic catalog and critical analysis of AI humanizer services, highlighting their functions and implications for educational integrity.
Findings
AI humanizers are widely available and offer free and paid services.
They perform identity concealment and frame AI use as justified responses to surveillance.
Services appeal to mystification and imply endorsement by institutions.
Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) has disrupted assessment in higher education and accelerated a cycle of compounding performances. Institutional policies demand the demonstration of independent authorship, while commercial AI-enabled services allow students to simulate independent thought and writing. This has led to enhanced institutional surveillance, including AI detectors, which are subsequently circumvented using other technologies. AI humanizers, internet-based services that alter AI-generated text to avoid automated or human detection, are a recent symptom of this performative cycle. Little is known about how these services operate, how they appeal to users, and what they imply for educational assessment and integrity. This paper presents an exploratory, systematic investigation of AI humanizer websites, framed through Goffman's sociological account of dramaturgy. Using a systematic…
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