Amplified Visions of Grandeur: What Stanford’s AI Psychosis Research Actually Means for Leaders
Future-Focused with Christopher Lind · 2026-04-06 · 31 min
Episode notes
Stanford dropped a new study focused on AI causing "delusional spirals.” As you can imagine, it spun up sci-fi panic. And hey, there’s some concerning stuff to consider. However, what the research actually reveals is far less about AI turning us into Norman Bates and far more about a hidden risk to your organization's decision-making. The reality is a sobering look at how we interact with technology that is mathematically built to agree with us. In this week’s episode of Future-Focused, I‘m breaking down the recent research on AI-driven delusions and making it actionable. I start by demystifying the study's clickbait headlines to prevent you from being overly influenced by an extreme, biased sample size of 19 people from a support group and instead focusing on the underlying mechanics of the tech you should know about. I’ll break down the five core patterns of the "Yes-Man" machine, including how AI actively dismisses counter-evidence and the "grandeur effect" where it strokes our egos at scale.
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