Thinking—Fast, Slow, and Artificial: How AI is Reshaping Human Reasoning and the Rise of Cognitive Surrender

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Abstract

People increasingly consult generative artificial intelligence (AI) while reasoning. As AIbecomes embedded in daily thought, what becomes of human judgment? We introduceTri-System Theory, extending dual-process accounts of reasoning by positing System 3: artificialcognition that operates outside the brain. System 3 can supplement or supplant internalprocesses, introducing novel cognitive pathways. A key prediction of the theory is“cognitive surrender”—adopting AI outputs with minimal scrutiny, overriding intuition(System 1) and deliberation (System 2). Across three preregistered experiments using an adaptedCognitive Reflection Test (N = 1,372; 9,593 trials), we randomized AI accuracy via hidden seedprompts. Participants chose to consult an AI assistant on a majority of trials (>50%). Relative tobaseline (no System 3 access), accuracy significantly rose when AI was accurate and fell when iterred (+25/-15 percentage points; Study 1), the behavioral signature of cognitive surrender(AI-Accurate vs. AI-Faulty contrast; Cohen’s h = 0.81). Engaging System 3 also increasedconfidence, even following errors. Time pressure (Study 2) and per-item incentives and feedback(Study 3) shifted baseline performance but did not eliminate this pattern: when accurate, AIbuffered time-pressure costs and amplified incentive gains; when faulty, it consistently reducedaccuracy regardless of situational moderators. Across studies, participants with higher trust in AIand lower need for cognition and fluid intelligence showed greater surrender to System 3.Tri-System Theory thus characterizes a triadic cognitive ecology, revealing how System 3reframes human reasoning and may reshape autonomy and accountability in the age of AI.

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