Tag Archives: role prompting

4 ways you can ‘role play’ with AI

4 roleplay design techniques for genAI
Rubber ducking
Using AI for ‘self explanation’ to work through a problem.
Critical friend/mentor
Using AI for feedback or guidance while avoiding deskilling.
Red teaming/
devil’s advocate
Using AI to identify potential lines of attack by an adversary, or potential flaws/gaps in a story.
Audience personas
Using AI to review content from the position of the target audience.

One of the most productive ways of using generative AI tools is role playing: asking Copilot or ChatGPT etc. to adopt a persona in order to work through a scenario or problem. In this post I work through four of the most useful role playing techniques for journalists: “rubber ducking”, mentoring, “red teaming” and audience personas, and identify key techniques for each.

Role playing sits in a particularly good position when it comes to AI’s strengths and weaknesses. It plays to the strengths of AI around counter-balancing human cognitive biases and ‘holding up a mirror’ to workflows and content — and scores low on most measures of risk in using AI, being neither audience-facing nor requiring high accuracy.

Continue reading

7 prompt design techniques for generative AI every journalist should know

Tools like ChatGPT might seem to speak your language, but they actually speak a language of probability and educated guesswork. You can make yourself better understood — and get more professional results — with a few simple prompting techniques. Here are the key ones to add to your toolkit. (also in Portuguese)

Prompt design techniques for genAI
Role prompting
One-shot prompting
Recursive prompting
Retrieval augmented generation
Chain of thought
Meta prompting
Negative prompting
Continue reading