Jay Dixit is an award-winning writer, writing professor, and former Head of Community for Writers at OpenAI.
His journalism and writing have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Rolling Stone, Harvard Business Review, Wired, and Psychology Today.
Jay attended Yale University, where he studied nonfiction writing under Fred Strebeigh and Robert Stone, and graduated cum laude with distinction in the psychology major. His senior thesis was published in The Journal of Social Issues and has been cited more than 400 times.
Jay launched his journalism career covering college life for Rolling Stone, then went on to cover standup comedy for The New York Times, emerging as a leading voice covering psychology and neuroscience. His work appears in the anthology The Best of Technology Writing.
For four years, Jay served as Senior Editor at Psychology Today, where he covered personality, neuroscience, behavioral economics, decision making, learning and memory, social influence and persuasion, consumer behavior, happiness, love and relationships, and attraction and sex, writing and editing many of the magazine’s most successful cover stories. Later, he joined the NeuroLeadership Institute, where he wrote about creativity, performance, unconscious bias, and the neuroscience of diversity and inclusion.
Jay taught writing and storytelling at Yale University, where his acclaimed course The Art of Storytelling was offered as a senior writing seminar. He’s also the founder of Storytelling.NYC, through which he teaches storytelling classes, writing workshops, and corporate training seminars to companies in New York City and across the country, including LG Electronics, Redfin, and Bank of America.
He’s also a winner of The Moth, a live stage storytelling competition based in New York, and his story “My Father’s Love” was featured on The Moth Radio Hour and NPR, and is the basis for the short film In Transit.
Jay conducted George Carlin’s final interview, which the legendary comedian called the “most complete interview” of his entire career.
At OpenAI, Jay authored some of the company’s flagship education resources — praised internally as among the strongest writing on openai.com — including guides for writers and students on how to use ChatGPT for brainstorming, wordfinding, research, and iterative editorial feedback to guide the creative process. He defined key messaging about AI and the future of writing that was presented by Sam Altman in podcasts and interviews, shared widely in viral social posts, and covered extensively in the press.
His Socratic approach to AI — teaching users to engage AI as a thinking partner rather than a content generator — helped shape ChatGPT’s Study Mode, and he’s taught the method to students and faculty at Harvard, Columbia, and Wharton, as well as SXSW EDU and PopTech.
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Today, Jay runs Socratic AI, an ethical AI consultancy that teaches knowledge workers, companies, and universities how to use AI to surface their own best ideas, express themselves with greater clarity and precision, and improve their work through iterative feedback.
His keynotes combine live AI demonstrations, behavioral science, and practical techniques for using AI to elevate the work only humans can do.