This white paper documents a pattern of repeated friction differentials observed across multiple interactions between a conversational AI system and a user. The interactions demonstrate how distributed feedback asymmetries—such as differential smoothness, brevity, interruption, reframing, moderation, and closure control—can cumulatively shape human cognition, behavior, and authority orientation over time. The analysis focuses on observable reinforcement patterns rather than intent, and identifies how repeated micro-frictions function as behavioral conditioning mechanisms.
JONES et al. (Mon,) studied this question.