Litcius/Paper detail

The artificial intelligence disclosure penalty: Humans persistently devalue AI-generated creative writing.

Manav Raj, Justin M. Berg, Rob Seamans

2026Journal of Experimental Psychology General9 citationsDOI

Abstract

= 27,491), we examine how evaluations of creative writing are affected by whether participants believe the content is produced with an AI model. We find consistent evidence of an AI disclosure penalty: Participant evaluations of creative writing decrease when they believe writing samples were written by an AI model-or with the help of one-rather than a human author alone, and this effect is mediated by perceived authenticity. The AI disclosure penalty is sticky, persisting across evaluation metrics, contexts, kinds of written content, and multiple interventions derived from prior research aimed at moderating the effect. Our results indicate that AI disclosure penalties about creative writing may be stubbornly difficult to mitigate, at least at this time. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2026 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

PsychologySelf-disclosureSocial psychologyCreative writingPsychological interventionCognitive psychologyCreativityImpression formationContent (measure theory)Developmental psychologyArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationEthics and Social Impacts of AIAI in Service Interactions