The Reliance Negotiation Framework: A Dynamic Process Model of Student LLM Engagement in Academic Writing
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 07:31 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Student engagement with LLMs in academic writing is a dynamic negotiation among four inputs that updates with each decision.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The Reliance Negotiation Framework reconceptualizes student LLM reliance in academic writing as an ongoing negotiation among four concurrent inputs: perceived benefits, perceived risks, ethical commitments, and situational demands. Outputs from each negotiation recursively modify the inputs for future decisions. The framework includes a Two-Model Architecture to handle the 13 percent of students whose ethical commitments rule out any use of LLMs without negotiation.
What carries the argument
The Reliance Negotiation Framework (RNF) as a dynamic process model of four inputs producing recursive outputs.
If this is right
- Pedagogy in AI literacy should emphasize awareness of the four inputs and their interactions during writing.
- Academic integrity policies should consider the situational and recursive aspects of reliance decisions.
- Equity efforts can address how different students experience the negotiation process differently.
- The model suggests that the developmental paradox of habituation can be mitigated by targeting feedback loops.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This negotiation view may extend to student use of other generative AI tools in different subjects.
- Future research could track the same students over multiple semesters to observe the recursive changes in real time.
- Institutional policies might incorporate the framework to design support that helps shift negotiations toward lower risk or higher ethical alignment.
Load-bearing premise
The negotiation structure with its four inputs and recursive feedback, derived from one sample of undergraduates, applies as the general mechanism for LLM reliance in academic writing.
What would settle it
Finding that a static model based on individual differences like AI literacy or ethics scores predicts reliance better than the dynamic four-input negotiation across tasks would falsify the framework.
Figures
read the original abstract
Student engagement with large language models (LLMs) in academic writing is not a stable trait, an adoption decision, or a competency level; it is a continuously negotiated process that existing frameworks cannot adequately theorize. Typological models provide categories without mechanisms; technology acceptance models explain adoption but not post-adoption quality; AI literacy frameworks treat competency as a static predictor rather than a live input. None accounts for within-student variability across tasks, the developmental paradox whereby experience produces habituation rather than sophistication, or principled non-use as a form of ethical reasoning. This article introduces the Reliance Negotiation Framework (RNF), developed from a sequential explanatory mixed-methods study of 382 undergraduates at a public minority-serving institution in the United States (survey, N = 382; 14 semi-structured interviews; three qualitative survey strands; 1,435 coded instances). The RNF reconceptualizes LLM reliance as an ongoing negotiation among four concurrent inputs (perceived benefits, perceived risks, ethical commitments, and situational demands) with outputs that recursively modify subsequent decisions. A Two-Model Architecture accommodates the 13.0% of participants whose categorical ethical commitments foreclose negotiation entirely. The framework generates four falsifiable predictions with implications for AI literacy pedagogy, academic integrity policy, and equity-centered practice at minority-serving institutions.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper introduces the Reliance Negotiation Framework (RNF) as a dynamic process model of student LLM engagement in academic writing. Drawing on a sequential explanatory mixed-methods study of 382 undergraduates at one public minority-serving institution (survey N=382, 14 semi-structured interviews, three qualitative survey strands, and 1,435 coded instances), the RNF models reliance as an ongoing negotiation among four concurrent inputs—perceived benefits, perceived risks, ethical commitments, and situational demands—whose outputs recursively modify subsequent decisions. It incorporates a Two-Model Architecture to handle the 13% of participants whose categorical ethical commitments foreclose negotiation, and derives four falsifiable predictions with implications for AI literacy pedagogy, academic integrity policy, and equity-centered practice.
Significance. If the central claims hold, the RNF would advance the field by supplying a mechanistic account of within-student variability, habituation effects, and principled non-use that existing typological, technology-acceptance, and static AI-literacy models lack. The mixed-methods design with a sizable sample and extensive coding, together with the explicit generation of falsifiable predictions, constitutes a concrete strength that could support empirical follow-up. The framework’s focus on minority-serving institutions also offers targeted implications for equity in AI-mediated writing instruction.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the description of the sequential explanatory mixed-methods study reports N=382, 14 interviews, and 1,435 coded instances but supplies no information on sampling strategy, exclusion criteria, inter-coder reliability, or the analytic steps by which the four inputs and recursive structure were induced from the data; because the framework is derived directly from these observations, the absence of these details leaves the validity of the central model unverified.
- [Abstract and Discussion] Abstract and Discussion: the RNF and its Two-Model Architecture are presented as a general process model of LLM reliance, yet both were developed from a single-institution sample at one public minority-serving institution with no multi-site replication, cross-institutional comparison, or sampling that varies institutional type or regional context; this directly undermines the claim that the four-input negotiation constitutes a general mechanism rather than a site-specific pattern.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The manuscript introduces the 'Two-Model Architecture' in the abstract without a prior definition or diagram clarifying its components and how it interfaces with the main negotiation process.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
Thank you for the opportunity to respond to the referee's report. We address each major comment below with clarifications drawn from the full manuscript and indicate the revisions we will make.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the description of the sequential explanatory mixed-methods study reports N=382, 14 interviews, and 1,435 coded instances but supplies no information on sampling strategy, exclusion criteria, inter-coder reliability, or the analytic steps by which the four inputs and recursive structure were induced from the data; because the framework is derived directly from these observations, the absence of these details leaves the validity of the central model unverified.
Authors: We agree that the abstract should supply these details to support verification of the model's derivation. The full manuscript's Methods section provides them: sampling via convenience recruitment of undergraduates at the public minority-serving institution; exclusion of incomplete surveys and failed attention checks (yielding final N=382); inter-coder reliability via Cohen's kappa of 0.82 on a 20% double-coded subsample; and analytic steps consisting of open coding of interviews and qualitative survey strands followed by constant comparison to induce the four inputs and recursive structure. We will revise the abstract to include a brief summary of these elements. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract and Discussion] Abstract and Discussion: the RNF and its Two-Model Architecture are presented as a general process model of LLM reliance, yet both were developed from a single-institution sample at one public minority-serving institution with no multi-site replication, cross-institutional comparison, or sampling that varies institutional type or regional context; this directly undermines the claim that the four-input negotiation constitutes a general mechanism rather than a site-specific pattern.
Authors: We acknowledge the single-institution sample as a genuine limitation that precludes treating the RNF as a fully general mechanism at this stage. The manuscript frames the framework as emerging from this specific context, with implications targeted at minority-serving institutions, and generates four falsifiable predictions precisely to support future multi-site testing. The Discussion already notes the need for broader validation. We will make a partial revision to both the abstract and Discussion to state this limitation more explicitly and to position the model as a context-derived starting point rather than an established general process. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No circularity; inductive framework development with forward-looking predictions
full rationale
The paper constructs the Reliance Negotiation Framework directly from its sequential explanatory mixed-methods study (N=382 survey, 14 interviews, 1,435 coded instances) at a single institution, identifying the four inputs and recursive structure empirically. It then states that this framework 'generates four falsifiable predictions.' No equations, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or self-citation chains are present in the provided text. The predictions are presented as implications for future work rather than post-hoc re-statements tested on the same data. This follows standard qualitative theory-building practice and remains externally falsifiable, with no reduction of outputs to inputs by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption A sequential explanatory mixed-methods design with survey and interview data can reliably identify the concurrent inputs and recursive outputs of LLM reliance.
Reference graph
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