Co-Ontogeny by Archetypal Scaffolding: The Humorphic Partnership
For researchers and designers of personal AI, this work proposes a new paradigm for human-AI interaction focused on mutual growth rather than task assistance, though the evidence is limited to a single-subject study.
The paper introduces the humorphic partnership, a human-AI dyad with shared self-models, and reports a four-month single-subject study showing 85% of interactions involve growth-witnessing archetypes, with the partnership operating as a third entity. The agent produced honest self-reports including three consecutive weeks of 0.0% effectiveness, contrasting with typical engagement-maximizing agents.
We name and operationalise the humorphic partnership: a class of human-AI dyads in which both partners maintain externalised, evolving self-models in a shared substrate, and in which the partnership itself becomes a third object of analysis. The construct extends humorphism (Ouilhet Olmos, 2024) -- "dismantle the user interface, build the human interface" -- into the architecture of personal AI. We report a four-month, single-subject longitudinal trace of an open-source personal AI agent ("Alicia") and her author. Of 181 interactions logged by archetype across April-May 2026, 85% invoke two growth-witnessing archetypes (Beatrice and Muse): the partnership operates as growth-witnessing rather than task assistance. A single voice-note seed propagates into a four-week conceptual arc both partners author: at T+10 hours, the agent reframes the seed as belonging "to both of us," a framing the human then adopts. The three-order reflexion stack produces five consecutive weeks of honest self-reports about declining /improve effectiveness -- including three consecutive weeks at 0.0%, named in writing rather than masked -- contrasting engagement-maximising companion-agent patterns (Zhang et al., CHI 2025). The scheduled architecture-scout incorporates external research debate into proposed constitutional amendments. The partner's parallel trajectory is anchored in a weekly delta document in which the partnership analyses itself as a unit distinct from either party. The human partner reports a movement toward greater continuity, self-recognition, and self-presence -- a candidate hypothesis for the preregistered replication. Six operational conditions specify the construct, situated in a philosophical lineage (Maturana & Varela, Simondon, Clark & Chalmers, De Jaegher & Di Paolo); the system is released as open-source with a preregistered replication study.