
This technical note presents a minimal synthetic stress test examining whether premature evaluation can produce locally readable outputs while reducing fidelity to the full evidential structure of a process. The setup compares four evaluative interfaces — EARLY, MID, FULL, and Forced Early Collapse (FEC) — across three evidence families: easy-local, distributed-integration, and reversal-conflict. The results show a structural asymmetry: early readability can remain legitimate in easy-local cases, becomes only partial under distributed integration, and can become strongly misleading in reversal-conflict regimes. The contribution is intentionally local and methodological. It does not propose a general cognitive theory, a psychological typology, or a universal account of premature judgment. Included in this record are the technical note, the recovered notebook used for the final synthetic stress test, and an archive of the generated outputs.
false stabilization;, evidence integration;, Distributed Evidence, distributed evidence;, Synthetic Stress Test, False Stabilization, evaluative interfaces;, diagnostic methodology;, local readability;, reversal conflict;, premature evaluation;, Structural Fidelity, structural fidelity;, Premature Evaluation, Interface-Dependent Evaluation, synthetic stress test;
false stabilization;, evidence integration;, Distributed Evidence, distributed evidence;, Synthetic Stress Test, False Stabilization, evaluative interfaces;, diagnostic methodology;, local readability;, reversal conflict;, premature evaluation;, Structural Fidelity, structural fidelity;, Premature Evaluation, Interface-Dependent Evaluation, synthetic stress test;
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