中国比较文学学会会刊 1984年创刊 由中国比较文学学会和上海外国语大学联合主办 ISSN 1006-6101 CN
  • 中国人文社科核心期刊
  • 中国学术期刊综合评价数据库来源期刊
  • 中文社会科学引文数据库来源期刊

中国比较文学 ›› 2026, Vol. 0 ›› Issue (2): 17-34.

• 学术前沿:想象的算法:人机共生时代的新诗学 • 上一篇    下一篇

从“相关性”模仿到“因果性”生成:人工智能叙事复杂性的逻辑重构与批评实践

姜娜   

  • 出版日期:2026-04-20 发布日期:2026-04-28
  • 作者简介:姜娜,文学博士,深圳大学人文学院博士后。研究方向:数字人文、媒介理论。电子邮箱:genger2019@163.com。
  • 基金资助:
    本文为教育部人文社科青年项目“人工智能文学创作的算法批评与多维度测评体系研究”(编号:25YJCZH103)、国家社科基金一般项目“赛博格叙事与21世纪科幻诗学建构”(编号:22BZW175)的阶段性成果

From “Correlation” Imitation to “Causality” Generation:Logical Reconstruction and Critical Practice of AI Narrative Complexity

Jiang Na   

  • Online:2026-04-20 Published:2026-04-28

摘要: 生成式人工智能正介入文学写作实践,但其叙事能力在理论层面仍存在争议。问题在于,其基于相关性统计预测的生成机制,与人类文学叙事所依赖的意图性因果建构之间存在裂隙。通过BERT模型对LLM生成文本的实证分析,本文揭示了其叙事生成中普遍存在的“相关性”写作倾向和问题,并进一步考察提示词工程从直接提示到“思维链”与“思维图谱”的演进路径,分析外部结构如何为大模型引入因果与时间约束。在此意义上,人工智能不再被理解为人类作者的替代者,而是作为协同叙事合作者存在。由此我们可以重新反思AI写作的作者、文本阅读以及因果性、时间性问题,为“AI叙事学”的理论建构奠定方法论基础。

关键词: 人工智能写作, 人工智能叙事, 大语言模型写作, 人机协作

Abstract: Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is intervening in literary writing practice, but its narrative capabilities remain controversial at the theoretical level. The problem lies in the gap between its generative mechanism based on statistical prediction of correaltions and the intentional causal constructions upon which human literary narrative depends. Through an empirical analysis of LLM-generated texts using the BERT model, this paper reveals the prevalent tendency towards correlation-based writing and its attendant problems in narrative generation. It further examines the evolution of prompt engineering from direct prompts to “chain of thoughts” and “thought maps,” and analyzs how external structures can introduce causal and temporal constraints into large-scale models. In this sense, AI is no longer understood as a substitute for human authors, but as a narrative collaborator. This invites a re-examination of authorship in AI writing, text reading, and the issues of causality and temporality, thereby laying a methodological foundation for the theoretical construction of “AI narratology.”

Key words: AI writing, large language model writing, AI narratology, human-computer collaboration