Description This note provides a retrospective micro-phenomenological extension to the Cognitive State Architecture (CSA) framework, focusing on high-integration boundary states in human–AI interaction. Rather than introducing new structural components, the paper examines a specific class of cognitive states characterized by high integration density at the limits of control stability. These states are analyzed from a first-person perspective and situated within the existing CSA state space, particularly in relation to transitions toward hyperconnected processing, overload, and fragmentation. The contribution lies in a fine-grained description of experiential signatures associated with these boundary conditions, including shifts in temporal perception, reduced articulation latency, increased associative density, and emerging instability in executive control. The analysis highlights how interaction with language-based AI systems can amplify or stabilize these dynamics by enabling rapid externalization and recursive integration. The note is explicitly positioned as a complementary layer to the original CSA formulation. It does not claim empirical generalizability, but instead provides a structured phenomenological account intended to inform hypothesis generation, experimental design, and further theoretical refinement. Within the broader research program on human–AI interaction and cognitive systems, this work contributes to a more detailed understanding of transition zones and instability regimes in hybrid cognition, with particular relevance for questions of interaction stability, cognitive load distribution, and the limits of high-integration processing.
Thomas A. Blüm (Thu,) studied this question.