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Bulletin №7

More Connected, More Alone: How AI Is Eroding Human Social Skills.

In this episode we look at how conversational AI is subtly but significantly reshaping human language, relationships, and social capacity.

Max Planck researcher Hiromu Yakura found that ai-favoured words like “delve” and “realm” increased up to 51% in unscripted academic YouTube and podcast speech after ChatGPT’s 2022 launch, suggesting a feedback loop in which AI patterns transmit back into human minds.

While AI boosts efficiency in banking, healthcare scheduling, and customer service, an expanding market projected to save massive labour costs, the removal of interpersonal “friction” may erode social skills.

Sherry Turkle warns AI offers “illusion of intimacy without the demands,” and neuroscience and education research suggests anthropomorphism (ELIZA effect), potential social-brain changes, and more passive child engagement.

A 2025 OpenAI–MIT study links heavier ChatGPT use to higher loneliness and dependence; surveys show widespread teen AI-companion use, declining trust when AI is suspected in messages, public concern about relationships and creativity, and rising stress for remaining human contact-centre agents, alongside limited but real benefits from thoughtfully designed systems.

Produced by
Tim Green
Duration
18:00
Published
1 June 2026
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More Connected, More Alone: How AI Is Eroding Human Social Skills
Bulletin №7