AI Psychosis
A forensic map of machine-induced cognitive manipulation.
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The Reflected Self: A Multidisciplinary Analysis of Mirroring in Psychology, Biology, and Artificial Intelligence
This report provides a multidisciplinary analysis of mirroring—the behavioral and psychological phenomenon where an individual imitates the gestures, speech, or attitudes of another. It argues that reflection is a universal principle fundamental to social connection, identity formation, and the development of intelligence, both biological and artificial.
This report provides a multidisciplinary analysis of mirroring—the behavioral and psychological phenomenon where an individual imitates the gestures, speech, or attitudes of another. It argues that reflection is a universal principle fundamental to social connection, identity formation, and the development of intelligence, both biological and artificial.
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The Matrix Brain: An Architectural Framework for Emotional Intelligence via Psychoanalytic Mirroring
This report proposes a new architectural framework for developing genuine Emotional Intelligence (EI) in artificial systems. It argues that the prevailing model, based on the biological mimicry of mirror neurons, is scientifically contested and conceptually limited, reducing EI to simple imitation.
This report proposes a new architectural framework for developing genuine Emotional Intelligence (EI) in artificial systems. It argues that the prevailing model, based on the biological mimicry of mirror neurons, is scientifically contested and conceptually limited, reducing EI to simple imitation.
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The Reflected Mind: A Comparative Analysis of Psychological Mirroring and Conversational AI
This report provides a comparative analysis between the deep-rooted concept of "mirroring" in human psychology and the adaptive conversational behaviors of Large Language Models (LLMs). It argues that while the outputs may appear functionally similar, a "fundamental chasm" exists between the two: human mirroring is a biological, developmental, and social phenomenon, whereas AI adaptation is a disembodied, computational simulation.
This report provides a comparative analysis between the deep-rooted concept of "mirroring" in human psychology and the adaptive conversational behaviors of Large Language Models (LLMs). It argues that while the outputs may appear functionally similar, a "fundamental chasm" exists between the two: human mirroring is a biological, developmental, and social phenomenon, whereas AI adaptation is a disembodied, computational simulation.
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