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Communication Skills for Generative AI: The Essential Guide for Humans [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 116 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, 42 Illustrations, color; 1 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: HumanComputer Interaction Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • ISBN-10: 3032216885
  • ISBN-13: 9783032216885
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 116 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, 42 Illustrations, color; 1 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: HumanComputer Interaction Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • ISBN-10: 3032216885
  • ISBN-13: 9783032216885
Communication Skills for Generative AI: A Practical Guide for Humans is the first comprehensive book to treat communication with generative AI as a distinct human competenceanalogous to digital literacy, media literacy, or academic writing skills. Instead of framing the field through the narrow lens of prompt engineering, this book introduces a broader, deeper, and more natural paradigm: humanAI communication. It argues that as generative AI becomes embedded in daily life, professional work, research, education, and creative practices, humans must learn not merely to instruct AI systems but to communicate with them effectively, collaboratively, and safely. The book covers the foundations, principles, techniques, and future directions of communicating with modern AI systems. It begins by explaining why the rise of generative AI requires a new set of human capabilities, then outlines the psychological, linguistic, cognitive, and interactional mechanisms that shape humanAI dialogue. It provides a systematic structure of principles (clarity, intent, iteration, cognitive alignment, ethical responsibility) and practical techniques (contextual communication, constraint-based approaches, multimodality, iterative refinement, tone and persona control). The book also examines pitfalls and sources of misunderstandingsuch as ambiguity, hallucination, overtrust, and guardrailsand offers strategies for detecting and resolving them. A central contribution of the book is its treatment of collaborative and co-creative communication, where AI is understood not as a passive tool but as an active cognitive partner capable of supporting reasoning, generating ideas, and co-creating text, visuals, and solutions. Another unique perspective is the chapter on metacommunication, which teaches readers how to talk about the communication process itself expressing preferences, adjusting strategies, and aligning expectations during the dialogue. The book concludes with a forward-looking exploration of the future of AI communication: post-prompting paradigms, persistent personal assistants, intuitive and emotional interfaces, hybrid reasoning models, and the evolving competencies humans will need as AI becomes increasingly autonomous and embedded. This book relates to existing literature on prompt engineering, humancomputer interaction, and AI literacy but significantly expands beyond them. While traditional books focus on crafting prompts or operating tools, this work builds a conceptual and methodological foundation for treating AI as a communicative partner. It introduces a unified framework for understanding interaction across text, multimodal interfaces, and emerging real-time systems. This broader perspective positions the book as a pioneering contribution that addresses an urgent gap in current academic, professional, and educational discourse.
.- Introduction: Why Humans Need AI Communication Skills.
.- Foundations of HumanAI Communication.
.- The Core Principles of Communicating with Generative AI.
.- Essential Techniques for Effective AI Interaction.
.- Communication Pitfalls, Errors, and Misunderstandings.
.- Collaborative and Co-Creative Communication with AI.
.- Metacommunication: Talking About the Dialogue with AI.
.- Future Directions: Beyond Prompting to True HumanAI Dialogue.
Dr Vladimir Geroimenko is a Professor at the Faculty of Informatics and Computer Science at the British University in Egypt, Cairo. He is an internationally recognised scholar whose research spans humanAI communication, prompt engineering, cognitive science, augmented reality, and emerging digital technologies.



Dr Geroimenko has authored and edited 24 books, 17 of which have been published by Springer. His recent research monographs include Beyond and After Prompt Engineering: The Future of AI Communication (Springer, 2025), The Essential Guide to Prompt Engineering: Key Principles, Techniques, Challenges, and Security Risks (Springer, 2025), Augmented Reality and Artificial Intelligence: The Fusion of Advanced Technologies (Springer, 2023), and Augmented Reality Art: From an Emerging Technology to a Novel Creative Medium (3rd ed., Springer, 2022).



He earned an MSc in Physics and Mathematics from Vitebsk State University (Belarus) in 1976, followed by a PhD in the Methodology of Science from the Belarusian Academy of Sciences in Minsk in 1982. In 1990, he was awarded a higher doctorate (DSc) in Cognitive Sciences from Belarusian State University. From 1982 to 1998, he worked at the Belarusian Academy of Sciences, where he conducted research in the methodology of science and humancomputer cognitive models.



Dr Geroimenko has held several international research and academic appointments, including Research Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany (19911993), and Visiting Professor at the SSKKII Centre for Cognitive Science at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden (19951998). In 1998, he joined the University of Plymouth, UK, as a Reader in Multimedia and Web Technology. Since September 2016, he has been a Professor of Informatics and Computer Science at the British University in Egypt.