AI costs are based on tokens (roughly word-chunks) not conversations, so a long synthesis counts more than many short questions—understanding this prevents the misconception that you should stay quiet to save money and lets you use AI for actual work without guilt. This also explains why pasting entire papers is reasonable but asking for ten quick fixes separately is wasteful.
Think of tokens like coins at an arcade. Each word (and even parts of words) costs one or more tokens. Different AI tools have a token limit—like only giving you $20 in arcade tokens before the game shuts down. When you hit your limit, the AI stops responding, even mid-sentence.
Here's the thing: tokens aren't exactly the same as words. The word "running" might be one token, but sometimes "unforgettable" gets split into two or three tokens. It depends on how the AI was trained. Generally, though, you can think of it as roughly one token per word, plus a few extra for punctuation and formatting.
Why does this matter for you as a student? Let's say you want to upload your entire research paper (5,000 words) plus ask the AI to improve it. That's a lot of tokens. Some AI tools have a limit—like ChatGPT's free version might cut you off at a certain point. Other tools like Claude handle more tokens before hitting the wall.
This is why sometimes your detailed prompt gets cut short, or the AI's response suddenly stops in the middle of a sentence. It hit the token ceiling.
The practical impact: If you're uploading long essays, research papers, or multiple lecture notes at once, you might get incomplete responses. You might need to break your request into smaller chunks, or use an AI tool that handles higher token limits.
Here's what you need to know: Don't think of this as the AI "running out of brain space." It's more like the AI is working within a time limit on a test. It's not that it got dumber—it just hit the boundary of what it's allowed to do in one go.
Different tools have different limits. ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini each have their own token windows. Some premium versions give you more tokens than free versions.
Try this: Next time you're uploading something long to an AI and it cuts off, count roughly how many words you uploaded (or copy-paste it into a word counter tool). Then try breaking your request into two smaller requests instead. Notice how you get more complete responses that way.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.