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    <title>Mark Wolfersberger</title>
    <link>https://hum.byu.edu/mark-wolfersberger</link>
    <description>Mark Wolfersberger</description>
    <language>en-US</language>
    <lastBuildDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2026 22:00:00 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>Editing in the Age of AI</title>
      <link>https://hum.byu.edu/editing-in-the-age-of-ai</link>
      <description>How will the rapid advancement of AI impact writers and editors? BYU linguistics professors offer their insight on this unique challenge.</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2026 22:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>Emma Lindorf</author>
      <guid>https://hum.byu.edu/editing-in-the-age-of-ai</guid>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<html lang="en">                    <head>                <meta charset="utf-8">                <meta property="op:markup_version" content="v1.0">                                    <link rel="canonical" href="https://hum.byu.edu/editing-in-the-age-of-ai">                                <meta property="fb:article_style" content="default">            </head>                            <body>                <article>                    <header>                                                                            <h1>Editing in the Age of AI</h1>                                                                            <h3 class="op-kicker">Linguistics,Matt Baker,Holly Baker,Mark Wolfersberger</h3>                                                                            <address>    <a rel="author" href="https://hum.byu.edu/emma-lindorf">        Emma Lindorf    </a></address>                                                                            <time class="op-published" dateTime="January 13, 03:00 PM">January 13, 03:00 PM</time>                                                                            <time class="op-modified" dateTime="April 30, 12:06 PM">April 30, 12:06 PM</time>                                            </header>                    <p>People use AI for just about everythingfrom creating shopping lists to forming exercise routines. Its even used in the workplace to write emails and other types of communication. This shift has triggered many questions for writers and editors about how AI will impact their careers. On November 13, 2025, linguistics faculty Matt Baker (Editing, Business Communication), Holly Baker (Editing and Publishing), and Professor Mark Wolfersberger (Editing and Language Teaching) gave a presentation for STET: The Editors Network (BYUs editing and publishing student association) on this very topic. They shared their research exploring the future of writing and editing with AI and how writers and editors can use this technology.</p><figure> <img src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/9d/fa/a58bca4a43908a20153d6e3b8157/baker-matt-3.jpg"></figure>Understanding AI<p>Matt Bakers presentation focused on understanding what AI is and what it is not. He explained that society has begun to fall into the trap of anthropomorphizing AI, which Baker defined as ascribing human-like traits to non-human entities. People subconsciously humanize AI by using certain verbs, such as </p>learn<p>, </p>know<p>, and </p>need<p>, when speaking of AI interfaces. However, AI does not possess the human ability to know or to need. Thus, Baker believes this anthropomorphization of AI is a dangerous practice because its not accurate to what [AI] is. Its not a human.</p><p>Some of the potential negative effects of giving AI these human characteristics, according to Baker, include misunderstanding how AI functions, maintaining unrealistic expectations of its capabilities, and allowing the technology to act as a scapegoat for unethical decisions. And, perhaps most relevant to the topic of writing and editing, AIs widespread use could limit human creativity.</p>The Need for Human Editors<p>Holly Baker also examined the element of human creativity, making the point that a human editor has experience in the world that ChatGPT does not have. This experience, she explained, gives humans much more wisdom than AI could possibly possess.</p><figure> <img src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/b1/be/6594b79f4cab9916449a37a7a743/baker-holly-2.jpg"></figure><p>She provided multiple examples of AI editing and writing suggestions that were blatantly incorrect and explained that if we let AI do our copywriting for us, it would actually introduce errors into the text. She believes that these errors demonstrate the need for a human editor who better understands the context.</p><p>Baker expressed no concern for the possibility of AI replacing editors because human expertise is superior to any artificial intelligence. However, she does recognize that the world is changing, and editors will need to know how to work alongside AI. She suggests approaching this eventual partnership by developing expertise in the field of editing, considering the job of human editors to be to recognize when AI is not doing it correctly and to discern when we need to step in and fix it.</p>AI as a Tool<figure> <img src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/0b/56/fb05478d43deb4935d6a8e01fa84/mark-wolfersberger.jpg"></figure><p>Wolfersberger agreed with Holly Baker, acknowledging that AI has a lot of positive aspects to it. He focused his remarks on the actual logistics of writers and editors working with AI and making use of it as a tool. He encouraged writers and editors to think about ways in which [AI] might be able to support some of your weaknesses.</p><p>He walked step-by-step through the writing process and suggested how writers might use AI. One idea he gave was for writers to begin with a brain dump and then to use AI to help organize that information. He also recommended writers use AI in the beginning stages of writing to create a preliminary outline. Using AI in this way helps writers feel inspired and guides the direction of their writing.</p><p>Wolfersberger did warn writers and editors against asking AI to copyedit their work because it tends to correct things that dont need correction, as proven by Holly Baker, who issued her own warning: Ceding knowledge, skills, and expertise to AI tools weakens both the editor and the final product. It can destroy the authors unique voice.</p><p>As AI becomes increasingly relevant in the world, the presenters expressed how important it will be for students to learn how to approach it in the workplace. Despite the uncertainty of this prospect, writers and editors can take comfort in this point made by Holly Baker: Theres always going to be the need for that human element, which is encouraging.</p><p>Learn more about BYUs STET: The Editors Network events <a href="https://stet.byu.edu/">here</a>.</p>                                    </article>            <script src="https://brightspotcdn.byu.edu/resource/00000173-da06-d043-a7ff-dece7d790000/_resource/brightspot/analytics/search/SiteSearchAnalytics.5eb1a8a326b06970c71b3a253fbeaa64.gz.js" data-bsp-contentid="0000019d-0718-d37b-a9dd-cfbe71630000"></script></body>            </html>]]></content:encoded>
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