Attention Decay Architecture: Follower Fatigue and the Dynamics of Posting in Constrained Systems examines how audiences metabolize high‑density theoretical content within platform‑restricted environments. In the post‑open‑web era, attention is no longer a stable cognitive resource but a decaying signal shaped by algorithmic compression, feed volatility, and structural limits on context. This essay maps the infrastructural forces that produce follower fatigue — not as a psychological shortcoming of the audience, but as an emergent property of constrained systems that accelerate decay and destabilize conceptual continuity. The work outlines how cognitive saturation, temporal compression, and algorithmic drift converge to erode the system’s capacity to hold complex theory. Posting strategy is reframed as environmental navigation rather than communication: creators must manage decay curves, saturation thresholds, propagation windows, and cadence to maintain coherence without triggering systemic overload. The essay demonstrates that fatigue arises when conceptual density exceeds platform bandwidth, when volatility collapses context, and when the system’s metabolism outpaces the audience’s ability to integrate ideas. By situating attention within the broader dynamics of the post‑open‑web environment, the essay shows that follower fatigue is a structural outcome of platform design, not a failure of interest or engagement. Attention Decay Architecture provides a framework for understanding how theory propagates — and collapses — inside systems that compress meaning, accelerate novelty, and privilege volatility over depth.
Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.