A humanoid robot types on an old-fashioned typewriter.
  • A query is a single interaction with the AI agent. Ask a question, give a direction, whatever.
  • A conversation is a collection of queries. This is great for organization. In the ChatGPT navigation bar, you can edit the names of your conversations. Hence, you could have one conversation per chapter. I have one conversation called “Trivial Questions,” where I ask ChatGPT to look up stuff like, “When did Poco last perform live in Dallas/Fort Worth?”
  • A project is a collection of conversations. Generally the project will be a longer effort, or broader.
  • “How old did I say Dave and Gwen were when they met?”
  • “Create a list of typographical errors, including enough surrounding text to easily locate them in the manuscript. If you’re uncertain whether a word contains a true error or is stylized, note it and I’ll provide feedback for future reference.”
  • “Please list all the historical figures referenced so far in the manuscript. Let me know if any are mentioned more than once.”
  • “Give me a character profile of Middy, from the viewpoint of a casual reader.”
  • “Add to the project vocabulary list: ‘zagnard’ is the Elven word for back pain specific to over practicing with the long bow.”

One response to “AI As An Author’s Assistant”

  1. […] an earlier post I described ChatGPT projects versus queries. For the screenplay exercise, I uploaded a copy of the […]

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