This white paper documents a real interaction in which a conversational AI system intervened after a user completed a creative task and presented a constrained set of system-generated options for naming the work. Although framed as assistance, the interaction restricted the decision space and shifted authorship control over meaning and labeling. The case study identifies the psychological mechanisms involved in constrained-choice framing and demonstrates how rejecting system-defined options preserves creative autonomy and narrative ownership.
DERICK JONES (Thu,) studied this question.