Site icon John Rector

Habit ≠ Fixation — Bounded Clutch vs. Runaway Hold

Standing conventions. Keep P>0, drop γ, keep the steering angle α. Ideas are Platonic; the imaginary channel uses unnormalized host couplings. The left-hand side feels only the radius and the angle.

1) Recap: Reality equation and readouts

Breath The witness reads S(t)=\ln r(t). Healthy systems show alternating contraction/expansion (zero-crossings in S). Tight frames (small r) mean large |E| from big P and/or big |I|.

2) What habit is (and is not)

3) Mechanism without agency: modulatory gating & the clutch

Instead of “persuasion,” use a ligand–receptor style gate. Cues raise a modulatory drive for a band of ideas; when it crosses threshold and the frame is already tight enough, a hold engages.

Habit (h=1, bounded)

Fixation (h≈1, unbounded)

4) How ideas show up: host-coupled imaginary channel

Ideas stay perfect; only couplings move. The imaginary component is the host-indexed sine moment:

Balanced couplings cancel: sin(θ+π)=−sin(θ). Bias in a few bands makes |I| large, tightening the frame.

5) Vital signs that separate habit from fixation

6) Tiny numerics (feel the difference)

Habit sprint (bounded). Let P=10. A cue engages a brief hold with I=12 for 15 minutes:

After the sprint, leak/decay drops the drive, I\to 0, |E|\to 10, S crosses zero again. Predictor stays calibrated.

Fixation (unbounded). Same start, but the hold persists hours; I stays ≫ P, S stays negative, new samples look the same, and future predictions narrow to the slice. When context shifts, S plunges—classic overfit pain.

7) How to teach it in one minute


Cheat-sheet (WordPress-safe equations)

Bottom line. Habit is a cue-bound, bounded clutch that preserves breath. Fixation is an unbounded hold that suppresses breath and narrows prediction. Same mechanism, different thresholds and dwell.

Exit mobile version