Every March, millions of people confidently fill out their NCAA tournament brackets armed with advanced stats, historical trends and strong opinions about teams they’ve watched all season.
I can’t do that.
I’m not a college basketball expert. I follow the NBA — ask me about trade rumors or whether the Lakers should blow up the roster and I’ll talk your ear off. Ask me about a potential second-round matchup between a No. 4 seed from the Big Ten and a random dark-horse team, and I’m nowhere.
Last year, instead of pretending otherwise, I tried something different: I asked ChatGPT to help me fill out my March Madness bracket.
The idea was simple. If millions of people were already using AI tools to summarize research, analyze data and make everyday decisions, why not see if it could help someone like me, a casual college basketball observer, make smarter picks during the most chaotic tournament in
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