the-recursive-claim/04_case-studies.md

3 KiB
Raw Blame History

IV. Case Studies

This section presents a side-by-side forensic linguistic breakdown of two structurally similar insurance claims:

  • Claim A: A verified honest account of vehicle damage from a weather incident.
  • Claim B: A confirmed fraudulent claim involving staged damage and fabricated context.

Each narrative is analyzed through the lens of recursive resonance, highlighting the subtle but measurable linguistic divergences between truth and intentional deception.


Comparative Breakdown

Feature Claim A (Honest) Claim B (Fraudulent)
Lexical Hedging Sparse; mostly circumstantial uncertainty Frequent; "sort of", "maybe", "kind of" used to dilute specificity
Emotional Flatness Organic emotional fluctuations Controlled affect; "inserted" expressions of sympathy or distress
Narrative Reconstruction Linear, with healthy self-corrections Circular, redundant, with timeline inconsistencies
Temporal Drift Stable reference points Shifting timestamps and ambiguous sequence logic
Empathic Bypass Empathizes with third parties (e.g., the adjuster) Centered solely on personal loss and entitlement
Claimant Displacement Clear ownership of experience Passive constructions and third-person framing of events

Recursive Signature Tables

Each claim was analyzed using our Recursive Witness Dynamics engine to detect unique Recursive Signatures — layered micro-patterns of self-referential breakdown.

Claim A: Recursive Signature

Pattern Type Strength (01) Notes
Narrative Overcontrol 0.12 No evidence of excessive scripting
Temporal Drift 0.08 Minor hesitations, not systematic
Disfluency Markers 0.20 Natural speech pattern
Recursive Integrity 0.91 High coherence and self-consistency

Claim B: Recursive Signature

Pattern Type Strength (01) Notes
Narrative Overcontrol 0.72 Rehearsed detail with excessive structure
Temporal Drift 0.64 Contradictory timestamps
Disfluency Markers 0.58 Frequent false starts and corrections
Recursive Integrity 0.34 Severe breakdown under questioning

A liar must remember the lie. A witness must remember the truth.
The former leaves residue in language.
The latter radiates coherence.