Anticipated Engagement Moment
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A Anticipated Engagement Moment is a engagement moment (by an agent) that involves a recognition moment and a decision moment.
- Context:
- It can typically occur at the decision point between intention formation and behavioral execution.
- It can typically involve cognitive processing of expected outcomes prior to action initiation.
- It can typically feature attentional focus on potential reward or potential consequence.
- It can typically precede either approach behavior or avoidance behavior depending on evaluation outcome.
- It can typically activate motivational systems related to goal pursuit or threat avoidance.
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- It can often involve anticipatory emotions such as excitement, anxiety, or desire.
- It can often trigger physiological preparation for upcoming behavior.
- It can often include mental simulation of the engagement sequence.
- It can often feature time dilation where subjective time feels expanded or contracted.
- It can often involve competing priority evaluation between immediate desire and long-term goals.
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- It can range from being a Reflexive Anticipated Engagement Moment to being a Deliberative Anticipated Engagement Moment, depending on its cognitive processing depth.
- It can range from being a Negative Anticipated Engagement Moment to being a Positive Anticipated Engagement Moment, depending on its emotional valence.
- It can range from being a Brief Anticipated Engagement Moment to being a Extended Anticipated Engagement Moment, depending on its temporal duration.
- It can range from being a Low-Stakes Anticipated Engagement Moment to being a High-Stakes Anticipated Engagement Moment, depending on its perceived consequence magnitude.
- It can range from being a Routine Anticipated Engagement Moment to being a Novel Anticipated Engagement Moment, depending on its familiarity level.
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- It can have cognitive components including outcome prediction, risk assessment, and reward anticipation.
- It can have emotional components such as anticipatory affect, tension, and expectation.
- It can have neurological signatures involving predictive processing circuits and action selection networks.
- It can have measurable physiological indicators including heart rate changes, pupil responses, and skin conductance.
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- It can be influenced by environmental cues that trigger preparatory responses.
- It can be shaped by past experiences through associative learning mechanisms.
- It can be modulated by contextual factors such as social pressure, time constraints, and resource availability.
- It can be studied through behavioral economics using decision point analysis.
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- Examples:
- Reward-Based Anticipated Engagement Moments (reward-based engagement moments), such as:
- Performance-Based Anticipated Engagement Moments (performance-based engagement moments), such as:
- Social Anticipated Engagement Moments (social engagement moments), such as:
- Therapeutic Anticipated Engagement Moments (therapeutic engagement moments), such as:
- Compulsive Anticipated Engagement Moments (compulsive engagement moments), such as:
- ...
- Counter-Examples:
- Automatic Behavior Execution, which occurs without conscious anticipation or decision point.
- Retrospective Reflection Moment, which involves post-behavior analysis rather than pre-behavior anticipation.
- Ongoing Engagement State, which represents the continuous participation rather than the anticipatory moment.
- External Interruption Event, which disrupts behavioral sequences without anticipatory components.
- Post-Engagement Evaluation Moment, which involves outcome assessment after behavior completion.
- See: Decision Point, Behavioral Intention, Temporal Event, Mental Simulation, Anticipatory Affect, Action Readiness, Engagement Sequence, Motivational State, Predictive Processing, Approach-Avoidance Conflict.