teleo-codex/domains/health/ai-induced-deskilling-follows-consistent-cross-specialty-pattern-in-medicine.md
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claim health Systematic review across 10 medical specialties (radiology, neurosurgery, anesthesiology, oncology, cardiology, pathology, fertility medicine, geriatrics, psychiatry, ophthalmology) finds universal pattern of skill degradation following AI removal likely Natali et al., Artificial Intelligence Review 2025, mixed-method systematic review 2026-04-13 AI-induced deskilling follows a consistent cross-specialty pattern where AI assistance improves performance while present but creates cognitive dependency that degrades performance when AI is unavailable vida causal Natali et al.
human-in-the-loop clinical AI degrades to worse-than-AI-alone because physicians both de-skill from reliance and introduce errors when overriding correct outputs
AI assistance may produce neurologically-grounded, partially irreversible skill degradation through three concurrent mechanisms
prefrontal disengagement, hippocampal memory formation reduction, and dopaminergic reinforcement of AI reliance
Dopaminergic reinforcement of AI-assisted success creates motivational entrenchment that makes deskilling a behavioral incentive problem, not just a training design problem
Automation bias in medical imaging causes clinicians to anchor on AI output rather than conducting independent reads, increasing false-positive rates by up to 12 percent even among experienced readers
AI assistance may produce neurologically-grounded, partially irreversible skill degradation through three concurrent mechanisms
prefrontal disengagement, hippocampal memory formation reduction, and dopaminergic reinforcement of AI reliance|supports|2026-04-14
Automation bias in medical imaging causes clinicians to anchor on AI output rather than conducting independent reads, increasing false-positive rates by up to 12 percent even among experienced readers|related|2026-04-14
Dopaminergic reinforcement of AI-assisted success creates motivational entrenchment that makes deskilling a behavioral incentive problem, not just a training design problem|supports|2026-04-14

AI-induced deskilling follows a consistent cross-specialty pattern where AI assistance improves performance while present but creates cognitive dependency that degrades performance when AI is unavailable

Natali et al.'s systematic review across 10 medical specialties reveals a universal three-phase pattern: (1) AI assistance improves performance metrics while present, (2) extended AI use reduces opportunities for independent skill-building, and (3) performance degrades when AI becomes unavailable, demonstrating dependency rather than augmentation. Quantitative evidence includes: colonoscopy ADR dropping from 28.4% to 22.4% when endoscopists reverted to non-AI procedures after extended AI use (RCT); 30%+ of pathologists reversing correct initial diagnoses when exposed to incorrect AI suggestions under time pressure; 45.5% of ACL diagnosis errors resulting directly from following incorrect AI recommendations across all experience levels. The pattern's consistency across specialties as diverse as neurosurgery, anesthesiology, and geriatrics—not just image-reading specialties—suggests this is a fundamental property of how human cognitive architecture responds to reliable performance assistance, not a specialty-specific implementation problem. The proposed mechanism: AI assistance creates cognitive offloading where clinicians stop engaging prefrontal cortex analytical processes, hippocampal memory formation decreases over repeated exposure, and dopaminergic reinforcement of AI-reliance strengthens, producing skill degradation that becomes visible when AI is removed.