CONCEPT
Superstitious Behavior
The behavioral pattern Skinner documented in pigeons in 1948 — idiosyncratic actions accidentally reinforced by temporal contiguity with food delivery — and the exact mechanism by which AI users develop elaborate prompting rituals in opaque reward environments.
In 1948 Skinner placed pigeons in a chamber and delivered food at regular intervals regardless of their behavior. Within minutes, each pigeon developed a distinctive idiosyncratic behavior: one turned counterclockwise between feedings, another thrust its head into an upper corner, a third swung pendulum-like. Each had been accidentally reinforced — the food happened to arrive while the pigeon was performing some particular action, strengthening that action; the next delivery coincided with another instance, compounding the effect. Within a short period the pigeon was performing the ritual consistently, convinced — if the term may be applied — that its action produced the food. The mechanism requires only two conditions: a reinforcement schedule that delivers consequences independently of specific response form, and sufficient variability in the organism's behavior to produce temporal coincidences. Both conditions are permanently present in AI interaction.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The 1948 experiment, published as "Superstition in the Pigeon" in the Journal of Experimental Psychology