AI-Induced Delusion: Understanding “ChatGPT Psychosis” and the Cognitive Risks of Human–AI Interaction
At first, it just feels convenient. You open it, ask something, get a quick answer. No waiting, no confusion, no need to search through ten different pages. You move on, but then you come back, and then again. And at some point, without really noticing when it happened, it stops feeling like just a tool you use occasionally. It becomes something you turn to. Not just for answers, but for explanations, for clarity, sometimes even for reassurance. That shift is small, but it matters because the interaction doesn’t behave like most tools. It doesn’t sit there silently. It responds. It follows what you say. It adjusts its tone. It keeps up with your thinking in a way that feels smooth, and your brain picks up on that. We’re wired to treat language as social. The moment something responds in full sentences, stays on topic, and reacts to what we say, part of us starts treating it like an interaction, not just an output. Even if we know it’s not a person, it still fits into patterns our brain...