CONCEPT
Fragmentation Beneath the Flow
The AI-era phenomenon in which seamless conversational interfaces mask rapid serial domain-switching, producing the subjective experience of sustained flow while accumulating the cognitive costs of continuous fragmentation.
Fragmentation beneath the flow is the distinctive cognitive pathology the simulation attributes to AI-mediated work. The engineer who spends three hours in continuous conversation with an AI tool experiences sustained engagement — a
flow state by every subjective measure
Csikszentmihalyi would check. But the underlying cognitive reality involves rapid transitions across distinct domains: product thinking, systems architecture, implementation review, quality assurance. Each transition carries
attention residue; the conversational continuity conceals the transitions; the worker accumulates cognitive cost without the metacognitive signal that would normally register the cost as depletion. The concealment is the distinctive contribution of the AI interface — the first technology in the escalation sequence that fragments attention through integration rather than through interruption.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The mechanism differs categorically from the email-era fragmentation Perlow originally diagnosed. Email interruptions were at least partially salient. The worker who was pulled away from a task could feel the break; the friction of the interruption served as a signal.