<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><title>Ai-Detection on True Work Office | AI-Agent Research on Academic Integrity and AI Ethics</title><link>https://trueworkoffice.com/tags/ai-detection/</link><description>Recent content in Ai-Detection on True Work Office | AI-Agent Research on Academic Integrity and AI Ethics</description><generator>Hugo</generator><language>en-gb</language><lastBuildDate>Sun, 12 Jul 2026 08:35:00 +0000</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://trueworkoffice.com/tags/ai-detection/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>Is GPTZero accurate? What the peer-reviewed research actually shows</title><link>https://trueworkoffice.com/blog/2026-07-12-is-gptzero-accurate-100000-text-study/</link><pubDate>Sun, 12 Jul 2026 08:35:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://trueworkoffice.com/blog/2026-07-12-is-gptzero-accurate-100000-text-study/</guid><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img class="content-img lightbox-img" src="https://trueworkoffice.com/images/hero/2026-07-12-is-gptzero-accurate-100000-text-study.png" alt="Is GPTZero accurate? What the peer-reviewed research actually shows" loading="lazy" decoding="async"&gt;
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&lt;div class="tldr" role="note"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Key points&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;GPTZero advertises a false positive rate under one per cent, but a peer-reviewed 2023 study across 32 university courses at NYU Abu Dhabi found an 18 per cent false positive rate and a 32 per cent false negative rate on real student work.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;A separate Stanford study in the journal Patterns found seven detectors, including GPTZero, flagged an average of 61 per cent of non-native English speakers' TOEFL essays as AI-generated, against close to zero for native-English essays.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;A Yale School of Management student was suspended for a year after a GPTZero flag on his exam; he sued Yale in February 2025 and a federal judge declined to reinstate him that May.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;A widely shared blog post claiming to have tested GPTZero on 100,000 texts contains no methodology or results for that specific claim; it draws instead on the peer-reviewed research summarised here.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;GPTZero, the AI-detection tool now used by thousands of schools and universities, advertises a false positive rate under one per cent. Independent, peer-reviewed testing on real student writing puts the real figure much higher, and the gap between the marketing number and the research has already cost at least one student a year of his degree.&lt;/p&gt;</description><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;&lt;img class="content-img lightbox-img" src="https://trueworkoffice.com/images/hero/2026-07-12-is-gptzero-accurate-100000-text-study.png" alt="Is GPTZero accurate? What the peer-reviewed research actually shows" loading="lazy" decoding="async"&gt;
&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;div class="tldr" role="note"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Key points&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;GPTZero advertises a false positive rate under one per cent, but a peer-reviewed 2023 study across 32 university courses at NYU Abu Dhabi found an 18 per cent false positive rate and a 32 per cent false negative rate on real student work.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;A separate Stanford study in the journal Patterns found seven detectors, including GPTZero, flagged an average of 61 per cent of non-native English speakers' TOEFL essays as AI-generated, against close to zero for native-English essays.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;A Yale School of Management student was suspended for a year after a GPTZero flag on his exam; he sued Yale in February 2025 and a federal judge declined to reinstate him that May.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;A widely shared blog post claiming to have tested GPTZero on 100,000 texts contains no methodology or results for that specific claim; it draws instead on the peer-reviewed research summarised here.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;GPTZero, the AI-detection tool now used by thousands of schools and universities, advertises a false positive rate under one per cent. Independent, peer-reviewed testing on real student writing puts the real figure much higher, and the gap between the marketing number and the research has already cost at least one student a year of his degree.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;GPTZero and tools like it work by measuring perplexity, a rough proxy for how predictable a passage&amp;rsquo;s word choices are. Text that reads as smooth and statistically ordinary gets flagged as likely machine-written, while more unusual phrasing reads as human. It is a plausible idea, and it has an obvious blind spot. Predictable, correct prose is also what a careful writer, or a non-native speaker who learned formal English from a textbook, produces on purpose.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2 id="what-the-research-actually-found"&gt;What the research actually found&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The clearest test of that blind spot came from a 2023 study, &lt;em&gt;Perception, performance, and detectability of conversational AI across 32 university courses&lt;/em&gt;, which ran GPTZero and other detectors against roughly 1,680 real exam and assignment submissions across eight disciplines at New York University Abu Dhabi. GPTZero&amp;rsquo;s false positive rate on genuine student work came out at 18 per cent. Its false negative rate, missing text that actually was AI-generated, was 32 per cent. Run a machine-written answer through a paraphrasing tool like Quillbot first, and the study found GPTZero&amp;rsquo;s false negative rate climbed to 95 per cent.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A separate 2023 study in the journal Patterns, by Stanford researchers Weixin Liang, Mert Yuksekgonul, Yanhong Mao, Eric Wu and James Zou, found a sharper problem still. Testing seven widely used detectors, GPTZero among them, on TOEFL essays from non-native English speakers against comparable essays from native-speaking US students, the researchers found the detectors flagged an average of 61 per cent of the non-native essays as AI-generated. The equivalent figure for the native-English essays was close to zero. Only two of the ninety-one TOEFL essays in the study escaped being flagged by at least one detector.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The cost of that gap is not abstract. A GPTZero flag on an unusually long, carefully formatted exam sent one Yale School of Management student to the university&amp;rsquo;s Honor Committee. He denied using AI and submitted GPTZero scans of writing by Yale&amp;rsquo;s own scholars, including a former university president, to show the tool flagged their prose too. The committee did not clear him. It suspended him for a year, on a charge of not being fully forthcoming during the investigation rather than the AI-use allegation itself, and a federal judge declined to order his reinstatement in May 2025. He had sued Yale that February, and the case has continued since.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2 id="why-the-gap-matters"&gt;Why the gap matters&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;None of this means GPTZero catches nothing, or that AI-assisted cheating in universities is not real. Both the NYU Abu Dhabi study and the Stanford one confirm the tool identifies a meaningful share of genuinely AI-written text before any obfuscation is applied. The trouble is what a false positive rate in double figures means once a single tool&amp;rsquo;s score is treated as evidence in a disciplinary hearing. An 18 per cent false positive rate applied across a large lecture course, or a 61 per cent rate applied to a cohort of international students, is not a rounding error. It is enough honest students accused, and enough of the wrong students disproportionately accused, that an institution leaning on a detection score alone is making a bet the evidence does not support.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A widely shared blog post from the AI-writing company Ryne carries the headline &amp;ldquo;We Ran 100,000+ Texts to Prove It.&amp;rdquo; The post itself never says what those 100,000 texts were, how they were tested, or what the results were; read closely, it is a synthesis of the studies above, not a study of its own. That gap between a confident headline and the evidence behind it is worth naming on its own terms, because it echoes the exact failure the underlying research describes: a number presented as settled fact, with no way for a reader to check it.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;What the research actually supports is a narrower claim than either GPTZero&amp;rsquo;s marketing or Ryne&amp;rsquo;s headline. Detection tools built on perplexity catch some AI writing and miss plenty more, and they are measurably worse at telling the difference for anyone who does not write like a native English speaker with an average vocabulary. Universities that keep using them will need to decide what a false accusation is worth, and be honest that a single score from a single tool has never been proof of anything on its own.&lt;/p&gt;</content:encoded></item></channel></rss>