The Deskilling Trap: How AI Assistance Erodes Your Eye for Fake News

For four weeks, sixty-seven people sat down with a screen and a question that has come to define the age: is this real? Each was shown a procession of news headlines paired with images, a stream of the genuine and the fabricated mixed together in deliberate confusion. Some of the pictures were authentic. Some were the synthetic offspring of generative models, plausible to the point of menace. And for part of the study, the participants did not face this alone. They had an assistant, a conversational AI willing to weigh in, to reason aloud, to nudge them towards a verdict. With the machine at their side, they grew measurably sharper. They caught more of the fakes. They were, on average, twenty-one per cent more accurate than they had been without help.
Then the researchers took the machine away.
What happened next is the reason the study exists, and the reason it should unsettle anyone who has come to lean on a chatbot to tell the true from the false. When the participants were asked to evaluate fresh headlines on their own, their performance did not merely fail to improve. It fell. By the fourth week, their unassisted accuracy had declined by 15.3 per cent compared with where they had started. The tool that had made them better at the task had, over the same weeks, made them worse at it without the tool. And a striking share of them did not notice. Roughly a quarter reported feeling that they had improved, even as the data recorded the opposite.
The work, conducted by researchers at the MIT Media Lab and presented at CHI 2026, the premier international gathering for human-computer interaction research, carries a title that reads almost like a warning label: “Dialogues with AI Reduce Beliefs in Misinformation but Build No Lasting Discernment Skills.” The team behind it, including Anku Rani, Valdemar Danry, Paul Pu Liang, Andrew Lippman and the senior researcher Pattie Maes, had set out to test a hopeful proposition. If conversing with an AI can durably lower a person's belief in false information, perhaps those same conversations might also teach the person to detect falsehood independently, the way a good tutor leaves a student more capable than they found them. The hope did not survive contact with the evidence.
The design of the study is worth dwelling on, because the architecture of the experiment is what gives the result its force. The researchers did not simply hand participants a verdict-dispensing oracle and measure their satisfaction. They structured the month into phases, taking a baseline measurement of unassisted accuracy at the outset, interleaving sessions of AI-assisted evaluation, and then testing participants again on entirely fresh, previously unseen items without any help. That last detail matters enormously. If the unassisted test had recycled familiar headlines, an apparent improvement might have reflected nothing more than memorisation. By presenting new material, the researchers isolated the thing that actually counts: not whether a participant could recall a particular debunked story, but whether the experience of working alongside the AI had left them better equipped to confront the unknown. It had not. The transfer that defines genuine learning, the carrying of a skill from one instance to the next, simply failed to occur. The machine had functioned as a prosthesis rather than a teacher, and a prosthesis, however effective while it is worn, builds no muscle of its own.
The analogue everyone reaches for
There is a metaphor that the researchers, and almost everyone who has since written about the study, reach for instinctively. It is the satellite navigation system. You have probably lived the small version of it yourself: years of obediently following the turn-by-turn voice, until one day the signal drops in an unfamiliar city and you realise, with a cold little jolt, that you have no idea where you are. You have been to this place a dozen times. You have never once learned the way.
The analogy is more than rhetorical convenience, because the underlying neuroscience is real and unusually well documented. The most celebrated demonstration comes not from a study of GPS users but from a study of the people who represent its precise opposite: the licensed black-cab drivers of London. To earn their badge, these drivers must pass an examination known simply as the Knowledge, a feat of memorisation requiring years of preparation and the internalisation of some twenty-five thousand streets and the tangle of routes between them. In a landmark investigation published in 2000, the cognitive neuroscientist Eleanor Maguire and her colleagues at University College London scanned the brains of these drivers and found that the posterior hippocampus, a region central to spatial memory and navigation, was enlarged relative to that of non-drivers. A later longitudinal study tracked trainees over the years of their preparation and watched the structure grow, but only in those who ultimately passed.
The Knowledge, in other words, leaves a physical signature on the brain that acquires it. The hippocampus responds to demand. And the corollary, the part that should give every habitual user of navigation software pause, is that the relationship runs in both directions. Tissue that is exercised grows; capacity that is delegated does not. Maguire's drivers also paid a price, performing less well on certain other memory tasks, a reminder that the brain is not an infinitely expandable warehouse but an organ of trade-offs. Subsequent research on habitual GPS use has reported associations between heavier reliance on turn-by-turn navigation and poorer performance on spatial-memory measures, with longitudinal work suggesting steeper self-reported decline in navigational ability among the most dependent users. The compass in your hand, used uncritically, becomes the compass you no longer carry inside.
The MIT team's insight was to recognise that misinformation detection might be a faculty of exactly this kind: a skill that strengthens with practice and atrophies with delegation. When you puzzle over whether a headline is genuine, you are exercising something. You are checking the source against memory, interrogating the image for the tell-tale incoherence of a synthetic render, registering the emotional manipulation in the phrasing, recalling whether the claimed event squares with everything else you know. Hand that labour to a machine and the immediate problem is solved. But the faculty goes unexercised. And faculties that go unexercised, as the hippocampus of the lapsed navigator demonstrates, do not stand still. They quietly recede, and the recession is all the more insidious for being silent, because nothing about the smooth experience of asking and receiving an answer signals that anything is being lost at all.
A long lineage of outsourced minds
If the finding feels novel, the anxiety it provokes is anything but. Plato has Socrates fret, in the Phaedrus, that the invention of writing would implant forgetfulness in the souls of those who learned it, because they would cease to exercise their memory and trust instead to external marks. It is fashionable to cite this episode as proof that fears about cognitive offloading are perennial and therefore overblown. That reading is too glib. Socrates was not simply wrong; he was describing, with reasonable accuracy, a genuine trade-off. Literate cultures did substitute external storage for prodigious feats of oral memory. We gained more than we lost, but we did lose something, and pretending otherwise misses the actual lesson, which is that every cognitive tool reshapes the cognition that uses it. The pertinent question is never whether a tool changes us, because all of them do. It is whether the particular change it produces is one we would choose with our eyes open.
The modern empirical literature on this reshaping is substantial. In 2011, the psychologists Betsy Sparrow, Jenny Liu and Daniel Wegner published a paper in Science describing what swiftly became known as the Google effect. Across four experiments, they found that when people expected to be able to look information up again later, they remembered the information itself less well, but remembered better where to find it. The internet, the authors argued, had become a form of transactive memory, an external partner to which we offload the burden of remembering, holding onto the index rather than the entry. We had begun to remember our way to knowledge rather than the knowledge itself. The phenomenon was soon given a popular name, digital amnesia, and it captured something real about the texture of modern thought: the strange confidence of knowing that an answer is retrievable, paired with the quiet erosion of actually holding it.
There is the calculator, too, the example invoked so often it has become a cliché of the genre, and a contested one. The evidence on calculators is genuinely mixed, which is part of why the comparison is instructive rather than damning: a tool that handles arithmetic can free a learner to grapple with higher-order mathematical reasoning, or it can hollow out the numerical intuition on which that reasoning depends, and which outcome prevails turns largely on how the tool is folded into the learning. The instrument is not destiny. The pedagogy around it is. A calculator introduced after a child has internalised the structure of multiplication is an accelerant; the same device introduced before that structure exists can prevent it from ever forming. The lesson generalises with uncomfortable directness to AI, and it is precisely the lesson the MIT study sharpens.
And there is aviation, the field that has stared longest and hardest into the question of what happens when humans cede a complex skill to an automated system. Decades of cockpit automation have delivered enormous safety gains, but they have also produced a documented phenomenon that pilots and regulators call skill fade: the erosion of manual flying ability among aviators who spend the overwhelming majority of their hours monitoring systems rather than hand-flying aircraft. Investigations by bodies including the United States Federal Aviation Administration have repeatedly flagged automation complacency and the degradation of basic stick-and-rudder competence as safety concerns, the danger crystallising in those rare, terrible moments when the automation disengages and a crew must suddenly fly an aeroplane whose feel they have half-forgotten. The aviation world's response is telling, and we will return to it, because it represents one of the few large-scale institutional attempts to deliberately preserve a skill that automation tends to corrode.
The deskilling we forgot to study
What unites the cab driver, the Google user and the airline pilot is a single, under-examined idea: that the most consequential effect of a powerful tool may not be anything it does to the world, but what it does to the person wielding it. This is the argument advanced in a paper published in May 2026 by Ilias Chalkidis and Anders Søgaard, bluntly titled “Brainrot: Deskilling and Addiction are Overlooked AI Risks” and accepted to FAccT 2026, the major conference on fairness, accountability and transparency in computing.
Their contention is structural. The field of AI safety, they observe, has organised itself around a fairly stable taxonomy of harms: discrimination and hate speech, violent or illegal content, information hazards, and the misuse of models by malicious actors for cyberattacks or worse. These are real and serious. But they share a feature, which is that they concern what AI systems output into the world. What the literature has largely neglected, Chalkidis and Søgaard argue, is what sustained reliance on these systems does to their users: the deskilling that follows from chronic cognitive offloading, the slow atrophy of critical thinking, and the dependency and attachment that can shade into something like addiction. These risks are, in their framing, hiding in plain sight, prominent in public conversation yet largely absent from the safety and alignment research that is supposed to anticipate harm. The authors go further, quantifying the discrepancy between how much attention the research community devotes to output harms and how little it devotes to user harms, and arguing that the gap is not an accident but a reflection of where the field's incentives and instruments happen to point.
The distinction they draw is the one that makes the MIT findings so quietly alarming. The danger most people associate with AI and misinformation is that the machines will manufacture convincing fakes faster than we can debunk them, flooding the information environment with synthetic plausibility. That danger is genuine. But it is a supply-side problem, a question of what is poured into the public sphere. Deskilling is a demand-side problem, a question of what happens to the human capacity to process whatever is poured in. The two interact in the worst possible way. The very tool offered as the antidote to the flood of fakes may, through habitual use, be eroding the cognitive immune system that the flood demands. We are, on this account, being handed a crutch precisely as the ground beneath us turns to ice. Worse, the erosion and the flood are likely to accelerate together, because the same advances in generative modelling that make synthetic content more convincing also make the assistant more fluent and more trusted, deepening the reliance at the exact moment the threat intensifies.
This is not the only recent study to point in the direction. In early 2025, researchers at Microsoft Research and Carnegie Mellon University surveyed hundreds of knowledge workers about their use of generative AI and reported that higher confidence in the AI was associated with less critical thinking, while higher confidence in one's own abilities was associated with more. The same survey found that AI-assisted workers tended to produce a less diverse range of outputs for a given task, a possible signature of homogenised, under-interrogated thinking. Around the same period, the researcher Michael Gerlich published a study in the journal Societies, drawing on data from hundreds of participants, that found a significant negative correlation between frequent AI use and critical-thinking scores, mediated by cognitive offloading and most pronounced among the youngest respondents. None of these studies is the last word. Each has the familiar limitations of survey-based and correlational work, and self-reported measures of one's own thinking are notoriously unreliable. But they are beginning to rhyme, and when independent groups using different methods and different populations converge on the same uncomfortable melody, the prudent response is to listen rather than to wait for a single decisive experiment that may never come.
The young, the trusting and the exposed
The demographic dimension is where the abstract risk acquires a sharp social edge. According to data gathered by the Pew Research Centre and cited in the MIT study, roughly one in five American teenagers now turns to AI chatbots for news, and around one in five adults under fifty does so at least some of the time. Pew's broader survey work supports the surrounding picture: about two-thirds of US teenagers aged thirteen to seventeen report using AI chatbots at all, with close to three in ten using them daily, and adults under fifty are roughly twice as likely as their elders to report using a tool such as ChatGPT.
Read those figures alongside Gerlich's finding that the young rely most heavily on AI and score lowest on critical thinking, and a troubling alignment comes into focus. The population most inclined to outsource the work of telling true from false to a machine is, on the available evidence, also the population whose independent capacity to do that work is most at risk of going undeveloped or eroding. This is not a story about people losing a mature skill they once possessed. For many of the youngest users, it may be a story about a skill that never gets built at all, because the scaffolding is removed before anything load-bearing has formed behind it. The lapsed navigator at least once knew the route. The teenager who has only ever asked the chatbot whether a story is true may never lay down the cognitive map in the first place. There is a developmental window in which the habits of scepticism, source evaluation and patient verification are most readily acquired, and a tool that pre-empts those habits during that window may foreclose them in a way that is far harder to reverse than the deskilling of an adult who learned them long ago.
It would be easy, and lazy, to slide from here into a familiar lament about distracted youth. That is not the argument, and the data do not license it. The teenagers turning to chatbots for news are, in many respects, behaving rationally. The information environment they have inherited is genuinely treacherous, thick with manipulated images and algorithmically amplified falsehood, and a tool that promises to cut through it is a reasonable thing to reach for. The problem is not their judgement in reaching for it. The problem is the design of the thing they reach for, and what that design does to them over time. Which raises the question the MIT researchers were ultimately driving at, and the one on which the entire matter turns. Is the deskilling inevitable, a fixed cost of any AI assistance? Or is it an artefact of how these tools happen to be built, and therefore something a different design might avoid?
Tools that tell, tools that ask
The MIT team did not stop at diagnosis. Embedded in their analysis is a distinction that may prove to be the most useful thing to come out of the entire study. There are, broadly, two ways an AI can help a person evaluate a claim. It can tell, or it can ask.
A telling system delivers verdicts. You show it a headline, it informs you that the headline is false and perhaps explains why, and you move on. It is efficient, satisfying, and, on the evidence, corrosive, because it positions the human as a passive recipient of conclusions rather than an active producer of them. As Valdemar Danry, one of the study's authors, put it, AI systems that tell by providing direct answers are more likely to foster reliance, whereas those that ask, through something like Socratic questioning, are better at engaging a person to actually learn. An asking system withholds the verdict. It prompts you to consider where the image might have come from, whether the source is one you recognise, what about the framing is designed to provoke. It hands the cognitive labour back to you, while structuring that labour so you are more likely to perform it well. The asking system is, in a precise sense, less helpful in the moment and more helpful over a lifetime, and the tension between those two timescales is the whole game.
It is worth pausing on a particular detail the researchers reported, because it sharpens the stakes. They identified a subset of participants, around a fifth of the sample, who behaved as what might be called dependency developers, passively accepting the AI's guidance with little independent scrutiny. And it was precisely the gap between felt and actual competence, the quarter of participants who believed they had improved while measurably declining, that should worry us most. A person who knows they have grown dependent can choose to wean themselves. A person who has grown dependent while believing they have grown skilled has no reason to, and every incentive to deepen the reliance. Misplaced confidence is the mechanism by which a temporary aid hardens into a permanent dependency, and it is exactly the mechanism a telling interface cultivates, because nothing about receiving correct answers teaches you to doubt your own unaided judgement.
This is the difference between substituting for a skill and scaffolding it, and the word scaffolding is doing precise work here. In developmental psychology, scaffolding refers to the temporary support a more capable partner provides to a learner, support that is calibrated to the learner's current level and, crucially, gradually withdrawn as competence grows. The point of a scaffold is that it comes down. A scaffold that becomes permanent is no longer a scaffold; it is a crutch, or a cage. The conventional misinformation chatbot, the one that simply renders verdicts, is a crutch by design. It offers no path towards its own obsolescence. The asking system, by contrast, is built to make itself unnecessary, to leave the user more capable than it found them, exactly as Maguire's Knowledge left its drivers with enlarged hippocampi rather than enlarged dependence on a map.
The design vocabulary for this already exists, and it has an appealingly counter-intuitive name: productive friction. The dominant instinct in technology design is to remove friction, to make every interaction as smooth and effortless as possible, and for most purposes that instinct is sound. But learning is not frictionless, and the very smoothness that makes a tool pleasant to use can be what prevents it from teaching. Productive friction is the deliberate reintroduction of effort at the points where effort produces growth: a prompt that asks you to commit to a judgement before the AI reveals its own, a system that requires you to articulate your reasoning, an interface that surfaces the verification heuristics a journalist or fact-checker would apply and invites you to apply them yourself. A growing strand of human-computer interaction research, including recent work on AI provocations designed to restore critical thinking to AI-assisted knowledge work, has begun to demonstrate that such friction can measurably raise the quality of engagement without destroying the tool's usefulness. The trick is that the friction must be productive, targeted at the moments where struggle builds capacity rather than merely irritating the user, and calibrating it is a genuine design problem rather than a slogan.
What aviation already knows
The aviation industry, having confronted skill fade decades before the rest of us, offers a working model of what taking deskilling seriously looks like in practice. The response there was not to abandon automation, which would be absurd given its safety record, nor to pretend the erosion of manual skill was not happening. It was to mandate the deliberate, scheduled exercise of the very skills the automation tends to atrophy. Pilots are required to hand-fly, to practise in simulators the failure modes in which the automation drops out and human competence must take over, to maintain the faculty against the day it is needed. The principle is that a skill worth preserving in a partly automated system must be actively maintained, because the system itself will not maintain it. Left to its own logic, the automation will quietly let the skill decay.
Translate that principle to the epistemic domain and the outlines of a response begin to appear. It implies that media-literacy education cannot treat AI assistance as a neutral convenience to be bolted onto existing curricula, but must reckon with the possibility that the tools students use to check facts are simultaneously shaping, and possibly degrading, the faculties the curriculum is meant to build. Pattie Maes, the senior MIT researcher, drew exactly this conclusion, stressing the importance of raising awareness in schools and academic communities about the shortcomings of AI as a learning tool. It implies that the design of consumer AI products is not an ethically neutral matter of feature optimisation, because the choice between a telling interface and an asking one is, in aggregate and over years, a choice about the cognitive capacities of a population. And it implies, perhaps most provocatively, that we may need the epistemic equivalent of mandatory hand-flying: structured, regular practice at unassisted discernment, built into education and perhaps into the tools themselves, on the understanding that the capacity will wither if it is never exercised.
The analogy is imperfect, of course, and the imperfection is instructive. Aviation could mandate hand-flying because it is a regulated profession with licensing bodies, recurrent training requirements and a safety culture forged by catastrophe. There is no equivalent authority over the billions of casual interactions between ordinary people and consumer chatbots, no licensing regime for citizens evaluating the news. The maintenance of epistemic skill cannot simply be legislated into the daily habits of a population the way it can be written into a pilot's logbook. That makes the design layer more important, not less. If we cannot mandate the practice from outside, the practice must be engineered into the tools themselves, so that the path of least resistance is also a path that keeps the underlying faculty alive. Chalkidis and Søgaard gesture at a complementary lever, suggesting that public information campaigns and regulation might mitigate deskilling much as they have been mobilised against other public-health risks, treating cognitive atrophy as a hazard to be managed rather than an inevitability to be absorbed.
The limits of one study, and the shape of the stakes
Intellectual honesty requires holding all of this at the right distance. The MIT study tracked sixty-seven people over four weeks. That is a serious, well-constructed piece of work, but it is not the foundation for sweeping civilisational pronouncement. Sixty-seven is a modest sample. Four weeks is a short window against which to project lifelong cognitive change. Laboratory and online study conditions are not the messy reality of how people actually consume news, and the artificiality of repeatedly classifying headline-image pairs may exaggerate or distort effects that would look different in the wild. The measured decline, real and statistically significant within the study, is a finding to be replicated and probed, not a law of nature to be enshrined. The authors themselves frame it as evidence that demands further investigation, not as a verdict already delivered.
There are genuine counterarguments, too, and they deserve more than a perfunctory nod. The optimistic case is that AI assistance frees human cognition from drudgery to operate at a higher level, much as literacy freed us from the tyranny of oral memorisation and arithmetic tools can free a mathematician for genuine reasoning. Perhaps a generation that offloads first-order fact-checking to machines will redirect its cognitive energy towards more sophisticated forms of judgement, towards synthesis and meaning-making and the evaluation of the machines themselves. Perhaps. But that hopeful trajectory is precisely the one the MIT data fail to support. The participants did not ascend to some higher plane of discernment; they got worse at the task and, in many cases, did not realise it. The mismatch between their declining accuracy and their rising confidence is the detail that should linger, because a population that is simultaneously less able to detect falsehood and more sure of its abilities is not a population that has traded up. It is a population that has been quietly hollowed while believing itself enriched.
What ties the strands together is the recognition that we are conducting an unplanned experiment on the epistemic capacity of the species, and we are running it backwards, deploying the tools at planetary scale first and asking what they do to us afterwards. The MIT study is one of the early, careful attempts to ask the question with rigour, and its provisional answer is that the relationship between AI assistance and human discernment is not neutral. The default design of these systems, the telling design that simply hands down verdicts, appears to trade long-term capacity for short-term accuracy, and to do so invisibly, beneath the user's own awareness. That is the worst kind of trade, because it offers no signal that a trade is being made at all.
But the same study, read carefully, contains the seed of a more hopeful possibility. The deskilling is not a fixed cost of intelligence in a box. It is, on the evidence, a consequence of a particular and dominant design choice, the choice to substitute rather than to scaffold, to tell rather than to ask, to remove friction rather than to place it where it does some good. A different choice is available. We know what scaffolded discernment looks like, in the Socratic tutor who refuses to give the answer, in the aviation regime that mandates hand-flying, in the developmental scaffold engineered to come down. We have the design vocabulary, the productive friction and the asking interface and the heuristic made visible and practised. What we have lacked, so far, is the will to prefer the tool that strengthens us over the tool that merely serves us, and an industry whose incentives reward engagement and ease rather than the slow, unglamorous cultivation of an independent mind.
The compass in your hand will always be more convenient than the one you must build inside yourself. That has been true of every tool that ever offered to think on our behalf, from the written word to the calculator to the satellite overhead. The question the fading compass poses is not whether to use the tool. It is whether we will insist on tools that, like the best teachers and the hardest examinations, leave us more capable than they found us, or settle for tools that leave us merely more dependent, lost in a familiar city, certain we know the way.
References
- Rani, Anku, Valdemar Danry, Paul Pu Liang, Andrew B. Lippman, and Pattie Maes. “Dialogues with AI Reduce Beliefs in Misinformation but Build No Lasting Discernment Skills.” arXiv:2510.01537, 2026 (presented at the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2026). https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.01537
- “The consequences of relying on AI for accurate news.” MIT News, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 9 June 2026. https://news.mit.edu/2026/consequences-of-relying-on-ai-for-accurate-news-0609
- Chalkidis, Ilias, and Anders Søgaard. “Brainrot: Deskilling and Addiction are Overlooked AI Risks.” arXiv:2605.03512, 2026 (accepted to the ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency, FAccT '26). https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.03512
- Maguire, Eleanor A., et al. “Navigation-related structural change in the hippocampi of taxi drivers.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 97, no. 8, 2000. https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.070039597
- Woollett, Katherine, and Eleanor A. Maguire. “Acquiring 'the Knowledge' of London's Layout Drives Structural Brain Changes.” Current Biology, 2011. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3268356/
- “Changes in London taxi drivers' brains driven by acquiring 'the Knowledge'.” ScienceDaily, 8 December 2011. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111208125720.htm
- Sparrow, Betsy, Jenny Liu, and Daniel M. Wegner. “Google Effects on Memory: Cognitive Consequences of Having Information at Our Fingertips.” Science, vol. 333, no. 6043, 2011, pp. 776–778. https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.1207745
- Lee, Hao-Ping (Hank), et al. “The Impact of Generative AI on Critical Thinking: Self-Reported Reductions in Cognitive Effort and Confidence Effects From a Survey of Knowledge Workers.” Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, Microsoft Research and Carnegie Mellon University, 2025. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/publication/the-impact-of-generative-ai-on-critical-thinking-self-reported-reductions-in-cognitive-effort-and-confidence-effects-from-a-survey-of-knowledge-workers/
- Gerlich, Michael. “AI Tools in Society: Impacts on Cognitive Offloading and the Future of Critical Thinking.” Societies, vol. 15, no. 1, Article 6, 2025. https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/15/1/6
- “Teens, Social Media and AI Chatbots 2025.” Pew Research Centre, 9 December 2025. https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2025/12/09/teens-social-media-and-ai-chatbots-2025/
- “Americans' Views on AI Chatbots, Smart Devices and AI's Impact.” Pew Research Centre, 17 June 2026. https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2026/06/17/americans-and-ai-2026-chatbots-smart-devices-and-views-on-impact/
- “The Dangers of Overreliance on Automation.” FAA Safety Briefing Magazine, Federal Aviation Administration. https://medium.com/faa/the-dangers-of-overreliance-on-automation-5b7afb56ebdc
- “Methods for Preventing the Degradation of Manual Flying Skills in an Automated Cockpit Environment.” The Collegiate Aviation Review International. https://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/CARI/article/view/10345

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
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