⚡ Attention Dynamics
Attention is the primary energy source of media ecosystems. It behaves like a fluid—pooling, spiking, cascading, or evaporating depending on distribution topology, narrative coherence, signal integrity, and temporal cadence. The MSM treats attention not as engagement or sentiment, but as a structural force that shapes drift, transitions, and basin stability.
Attention Dynamics correspond to the A‑axis of the Media Substrate Vector:
A ∈ [0.0, 1.0]
High A indicates concentrated, volatile, or rapidly shifting attention.
Low A indicates diffuse, stable, or decayed attention.
Forms of Attention Energy#
Attention expresses itself through several structural modes:
- Pooling — attention concentrates around a topic or node, increasing stability but also increasing pressure.
- Volatility — attention shifts rapidly, destabilizing narratives and distribution structures.
- Spikes — sudden surges that exceed the carrying capacity of distribution topology.
- Cascades — runaway amplification events where attention propagates faster than narratives or signals can stabilize.
- Decay — attention dissipates, reducing energy and often leading to stagnation.
- Burnout — prolonged high attention collapses into low attention, often accompanied by narrative exhaustion.
These forms determine how the system moves across basins and modes.
Structural Drivers of Attention#
Attention is shaped by interactions with the other four axes:
-
Distribution Topology (D)
Networked systems diffuse attention; centralized systems concentrate it; fragmented systems localize it. -
Narrative Coherence (N)
Strong narratives stabilize attention; weak narratives amplify volatility. -
Signal Integrity (S)
High signal supports sustained attention; low signal accelerates churn and collapse. -
Temporal Cadence (T)
Fast cadence increases volatility; slow cadence allows attention to pool and stabilize.
Attention is never independent—it is always a product of cross‑axis dynamics.
Attention Across Basins#
Each basin has characteristic attention patterns:
- Broadcast — steady, pooled attention with low volatility.
- Network — rhythmic cycles of attention across distributed nodes.
- Fragment — localized attention spikes within silos.
- Cascade — extreme volatility and amplification.
- Stagnation — low attention, weak energy, slow decay.
- Reconstruction — moderate, guided attention supporting stabilization.
These patterns help classify basin membership and detect transitions.
Attention and Invariant Strain#
Attention interacts with invariants in predictable ways:
-
Distribution–Attention Fit
When A exceeds D’s carrying capacity → cascades. -
Attention–Narrative Feedback
High A destabilizes weak narratives → drift or collapse. -
Temporal–Signal Stability
High T amplifies A volatility → signal degradation.
Attention is often the first axis to break an invariant, triggering drift or cascade behavior.
Attention in Mode Transitions#
Attention is a key driver of mode changes:
-
Stable → Tension
Moderate increases in A begin to strain invariants. -
Tension → Drift
A volatility rises faster than narratives can stabilize. -
Drift → Cascade
A spikes beyond the system’s structural capacity. -
Cascade → Collapse
A crashes after overload, often accompanied by narrative failure. -
Collapse → Reconstruction
A stabilizes at moderate levels as cadence slows and signal improves.
Attention is both a destabilizer and a stabilizer depending on its magnitude and distribution.
Measuring Attention Dynamics#
Adapters may derive A from:
- Engagement volatility
- Temporal clustering
- Topic concentration
- Cascade signatures
- Decay curves
- Saturation and burnout patterns
These raw signals are normalized into the A‑axis of the MediaVector.
Summary#
Attention Dynamics define the energy landscape of the media substrate:
- High A drives cascades and destabilization.
- Low A leads to stagnation and decay.
- Moderate A supports reconstruction and stability.
- A interacts with D, N, S, and T to shape drift and transitions.
Attention is the most volatile axis in the MSM and the most common trigger for basin transitions.