--- type: source title: "AI Is Deskilling You. Here's How to Prevent It" author: "Kartik Hosanagar (@kartikh)" url: https://hosanagar.substack.com/p/ai-is-deskilling-you-heres-how-to date: 2026-02-01 domain: ai-alignment secondary_domains: [health] format: article status: null-result priority: high tags: [deskilling, human-competency, reliance-drills, analog-practice, automation-overshoot, organizational-intervention] processed_by: theseus processed_date: 2026-03-18 extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5" extraction_notes: "LLM returned 2 claims, 2 rejected by validator" --- ## Content Author (Wharton professor): AI deskilling is real and requires deliberate organizational intervention. Three case studies: **Aviation:** 2009 Air France 447 crash — pilots lost manual flying skills through automation dependency. FAA now requires mandatory manual practice sessions. **Medicine:** Endoscopists using AI for polyp detection became worse at finding polyps when AI was turned off. Adenoma detection dropped from 28% to 22% without AI (same data as Lancet Gastroenterology cited in previous sessions). **Education:** Students with unrestricted GPT-4 access initially performed better at math, but underperformed compared to peers who never used AI once access was removed. **Proposed interventions:** Individual level: - Practice "mindful" AI use — distinguish between skills deliberately outsourced vs. skills being eroded - Require human first rounds (sketches, assumptions, hypotheses) before AI assistance - Build deliberate review points to re-engage judgment Organizational level: - **Reliance Drills**: Routine stress tests simulating AI failure or unavailability — expose knowledge erosion before crises. E.g., failure scenarios where teams reach decisions without AI, or "off-AI days" - **Analog Practice**: Required independent thinking and creation to maintain resilience; analogous to pilots' mandatory manual flying requirements ## Agent Notes **Why this matters:** Provides specific, actionable organizational interventions for preventing the deskilling drift that was identified as Mechanism 3 of automation overshoot. The reliance drills concept is directly analogous to how aviation solved its equivalent problem — and aviation solved it through regulatory mandate (FAA). This suggests the deskilling correction mechanism requires regulatory forcing, not voluntary adoption. **What surprised me:** The three-domain evidence convergence (aviation → medicine → education) across independent fields all showing the same deskilling pattern makes this much stronger than any single-domain claim. The FAA mandate for manual practice is the closest analogue I've found to what a regulatory correction mechanism for AI deskilling would look like. **What I expected but didn't find:** Specific evidence that reliance drills or analog practice work in AI contexts — these are proposed by analogy, not yet tested. The aviation fix took decades after the problem was identified. The organizational interventions remain voluntary and self-selected. **KB connections:** - [[AI capability and reliability are independent dimensions]] — deskilling is the human-side version of this problem - [[human-in-the-loop clinical AI degrades to worse-than-AI-alone]] — same mechanism, different direction - [[economic forces push humans out of every cognitive loop]] — the economic force the author is trying to correct against **Extraction hints:** - Claim candidate: "reliance drills and analog practice are the minimum viable organizational intervention for preventing AI deskilling because they create the regular human-independent practice that historically has prevented capability erosion in other high-stakes domains" - Could also extract: "FAA mandatory manual flying requirements are the regulatory template for AI deskilling prevention in high-stakes domains" **Context:** Hosanagar is a credible Wharton academic with AI expertise. The Substack format means this is less formally reviewed than his academic work, but the argument is empirically grounded. ## Curator Notes PRIMARY CONNECTION: [[economic forces push humans out of every cognitive loop where output quality is independently verifiable]] (the force these interventions push back against) WHY ARCHIVED: First source with specific, concrete organizational interventions against deskilling drift — the third overshoot mechanism. Also provides the FAA regulatory template analogy. EXTRACTION HINT: Extractor should focus on (a) the reliance drills concept as a claim about minimum viable organizational intervention, and (b) FAA mandatory practice as regulatory template. Do not extract the case studies — those are already in KB from other sources. ## Key Facts - Air France Flight 447 crashed in 2009 due to pilot inability to manually fly after automation failure - FAA instituted mandatory manual flying practice sessions for pilots following Air France 447 - Endoscopists using AI for polyp detection had adenoma detection rates drop from 28% to 22% without AI - Students with unrestricted GPT-4 access underperformed peers who never used AI once access was removed - Kartik Hosanagar is a Wharton professor studying AI and organizational behavior