In many organizations, performance problems tend to be interpreted as motivation problems, causing managerial attention to converge toward maintaining motivation rather than aligning individual expectations with organizational conditions. This paper documents a Recurring Capture Pattern (RCP) observed in motivation management-based organizational systems. Under the institutional condition of evaluation and management structures that treat motivation as a precondition for performance, especially where expectation misalignment exists between individuals and organizations, individually rational behavior systematically converges not toward performance creation through expectation alignment but toward the maintenance, performance, and management of motivation itself. As these behaviors accumulate, they increase institutional dependence on motivation management, resulting in the recursive reinforcement of expectation misalignment and reinforcing the same behavioral convergence through a recursive institutional feedback loop. The pattern ultimately produces a structural substitution of expectation alignment by motivation management, indicating a structural misalignment between institutional objectives and rational behavioral adaptation. This paper analytically describes the structural relationship between institutional design and rational behavioral adaptation. The document does not propose motivation measures, human resource implementation methods, compensation structures, or normative judgments on institutional deployment, but instead presents design principles and operational modules as analytical references for institutional design.
Hiromi Shimamoto (Tue,) studied this question.