Install
openclaw skills install @deciqai/hyperbolic-discountingActivate when: user says 'I'll start tomorrow / next week / next month' repeatedly; someone intends to save / exercise / quit but never follows through; a product's free trial or subscription is creating unexpected lock-in; someone wants to design a commitment device or pre-commitment contract; a team keeps deferring long-horizon work for short-term fires. Do NOT activate when: the changed plan reflects genuine new information (rational update, not bias); the time preference shift is due to real uncertainty about future receipt (bird-in-hand is reasonable).
openclaw skills install @deciqai/hyperbolic-discountingPeople discount the near future far more steeply than the distant future, producing dynamically inconsistent preferences: patient choices for next month reverse when next month arrives. Formalized by Laibson's 1997 β-δ model: any future outcome is shrunk by β ≈ 0.7 relative to the present, then discounted exponentially. The fix is structural: commitment devices that bind the future-impatient self — auto-enrollment, forfeits, friction removal, public accountability.
Composes with loss-aversion-prospect-theory, regret-minimization, compound-interest, and okr-goal-setting.
Not when: apparent impatience reflects real new information; discounting is rational due to genuine uncertainty about future receipt; cost of commitment device exceeds benefit.
In Coach mode, respond one step at a time. Each [WAIT] is a hard stop — output only that step's question, then stop.
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
Step 1 — Identify the reversal: intended behavior / actual behavior / repetition count / cost of gap.
Step 2 — Map asymmetry: immediate cost of desired vs immediate benefit of undesired vs delayed benefit of desired vs delayed cost of undesired.
Step 3 — Diagnose β: unaided success rate. If < 30%, internal correction is unlikely — install commitment device.
Step 4 — Choose device: auto-enrollment / financial forfeit to disliked cause / paid trainer with no-show fee / internet blocker / cash-only envelopes / public deadline with accountability partner. Criterion: (a) binds at moment of temptation, (b) hard to circumvent, (c) acceptable to present-self when chosen.
Step 5 — Install with defaults: set desired behavior as default (opt-out, not opt-in); add friction to undesired; remove friction from desired; set public accountability.
Step 6 — Re-check: 30/60/90 day evaluation — was the device circumventable? Re-install stronger or accept revealed preference.
# Commitment Device Design: <behavior>
Reversal: intended / actual / frequency / cost
Asymmetry: immediate cost of desired | immediate benefit of undesired | delayed benefit | delayed cost
β estimate: unaided success rate → severity
Device: mechanism | how it binds | friction added | default set | accountability | failure cost
Re-check: 30/60/90 day criteria | owner
→ Method in Action: David Laibson's "Golden Eggs and Hyperbolic Discounting," 1997
| Domain | Manifestation | Commitment device |
|---|---|---|
| Retirement saving | "I'll save more next year" | Auto-enrollment + SMarT escalation |
| Exercise | Gym membership + no attendance | Pre-paid trainer; class with no-show fee |
| Work focus | Open social media every 10 min | Internet blocker; phone in different room |
| Procrastination | Months of "I'll start tomorrow" | Pre-paid deposit forfeited; public deadline |
Willpower is unreliable; commitment devices are reliable — install structural fixes. Defaults are extraordinarily powerful (auto-enrollment produced a 37-pp shift in 401(k) participation). Educating naives to accurately predict their own future impatience is high-leverage even without other intervention. When a product makes desired-by-provider behavior the default and desired-by-consumer behavior friction-laden, name the exploitation.
→ Primary sources: references/sources.md
[D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "I just need more willpower" | Willpower is unreliable; the gap is structural, not characterological. |
| [D] "I'll definitely start tomorrow" | The number of times you've said this is the strongest evidence you won't. |
| [D] "I work better under pressure" | Usually post-hoc rationalization. Test it: prep earlier and see if quality drops. |
| [D] "I have other priorities" | True priorities show up in behavior. If it never shows up in action, it's aspiration. |
| [D] "I'll save when I make more money" | Present-bias scales with income; higher earners save at the same rate. |
| [D] "Future-me will handle it" | Future-me has the same bias structure. The present version is already not handling it. |
| [D] "I tried before, didn't work" | Without commitment device, that's expected. What structural support was missing? |
| → Add [O] entries here after each real use — paste the actual failure pattern | What went wrong and why |
Part of deciqAI Knowledge Skills — open-source thinking skills that make rigor executable for AI agents. Built by deciqAI · https://deciqai.com · Contributions welcome — see the template at the repo root.