IAD Glossary
Definitions of terms used across Institute case files, classification instruments, and field reports. Terms are cited with their originating document where applicable. This glossary is a living reference. New terms are added as field conditions warrant.
D
- Dignity Deficit
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A net negative in self-regard resulting from sustained asymmetric investment in a person who is not reciprocating. Distinguished from the Dignity Leak by duration and compounding: a Leak is active, a Deficit is accumulated. Subject may present with reduced standards for acceptable contact, increased tolerance for ambiguity, and a revised internal definition of what constitutes "interest."
- Dignity Leak
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Sustained emotional output (attention, effort, hope, availability) flowing toward a person who is not returning it in equivalent form. The Leak is typically invisible to the subject because each individual instance of output feels reasonable. The cumulative effect is not.
- Digital Evidence Misuse
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The practice of submitting platform artifacts (story views, active status indicators, emoji reactions, profile visits, timestamps) as proof of romantic interest. Each artifact has a non-romantic explanation that the subject is aware of and has chosen to set aside.
E
- Emotional Logistics
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Internal planning conducted in anticipation of a relationship that has not been confirmed. Includes imagined future conversations, rehearsed responses, and scenario modeling based on a situation the other person does not know exists. A primary indicator of Tier II and Tier IV conduct.
F
- False Positive
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A routine social interaction that has been misclassified as a romantic signal. The interaction has an objective, non-romantic explanation. The subject is aware of this explanation and has chosen to interpret the interaction as evidence of interest. The most common presenting condition in Tier I cases. See also: Signal Misclassification.
- Friend Consultation Loop
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Repeated solicitation of third-party analysis regarding a single interaction or communication. The subject presents the same evidence to multiple friends, seeking a favorable interpretation. Each consultation is treated as independent. The loop terminates when a favorable interpretation is obtained or when the friends become unavailable.
H
- "Haha, no worries"
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A terminal communication issued by a subject after their overture has been declined or ignored. The message asserts that the subject has no worries. The subject has worries. IAD Field Report No. 12 describes this as "the closing statement of the undisclosed application." The phrase is notable for its function: it allows the subject to exit gracefully while maintaining deniability about the overture itself.
P
- The Paragraph
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A multi-sentence message composed in response to minimal prior contact. Typically drafted and revised across multiple sessions lasting between one and four days. The Paragraph is distinguished from normal communication by its length relative to the context, its attempt to reframe the relationship, and its implicit expectation of a response that will change things. Sending The Paragraph constitutes an escalation event. The Institute has reviewed The Paragraph. It will not accomplish what the subject believes it will accomplish.
- Pre-Paragraph State
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The condition in which a draft message exists but has not been sent. Distinguished from normal message composition by duration (exceeding 24 hours), revision count (exceeding three), and the subject's awareness that the message is disproportionate to the context. The subject is in Pre-Paragraph State. The subject knows they are in Pre-Paragraph State. The Institute recommends closing the drafts folder.
- Professional Camouflage
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The use of work-adjacent, logistical, or intellectually plausible framing to engineer contact with a person of romantic interest. The pretext is real. The actual purpose is not disclosed. Common forms include: sharing an article "they might find useful," asking a professional question the subject already knows the answer to, and requesting feedback on a project that does not require feedback.
R
- Romantic Subtext Attribution
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The identification of implied romantic meaning in a communication that contains no such meaning. The subtext is not present in the message. It is present in the subject's reading of the message. Attribution typically increases in frequency as the subject's investment increases, creating a feedback loop in which greater investment produces more attributions, which justify greater investment.
- Route Capture
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The condition in which a subject has been integrated into another person's logistical infrastructure (airport transportation, technical support, errand completion, furniture assembly) without a corresponding relationship status. The subject has made themselves useful. This is not the same as making themselves wanted. A primary indicator of Tier III conduct.
S
- Signal Misclassification
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See: False Positive. The Institute prefers this term in formal documentation because it is descriptive without being evaluative. The signal existed. The classification of the signal was the error.
- Situational Recalibration
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The process by which a subject reinterprets existing evidence to maintain a desired conclusion in the face of contradicting information. Common forms include: "She said maybe because she was nervous"; "She didn't respond because she's been busy"; "The fact that she hasn't texted means she's thinking about what to say." The recalibration preserves the conclusion. The conclusion is not supported by the evidence.
- Soft Launch
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The internal reclassification of a non-relationship as a relationship pending official announcement. The subject treats the other person as a partner in private contexts (in conversations with friends, in future planning, in emotional investment) while the other person has not agreed to this classification and is unaware it has occurred.
T
- The Tactical Reach-Out
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A contact initiated under a plausible pretext (sharing a meme, asking a logistical question, offering unsolicited information) when the actual purpose is to restart a communication thread that has gone dormant. Distinguished from legitimate contact by the thinness of the pretext and the subject's awareness that the pretext is thin. The pretext does not need to be convincing. It needs to be deniable.
U
- Unauthorized Domestic Projection
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The assignment of long-term domestic or relational significance to a logistically neutral interaction. The subject performs a service (repairs a device, provides a meal, assists with a move) and internally registers this as evidence of a shared domestic future. The other person received a service. The subject experienced a relationship milestone. These are not the same event.
- Unlicensed Volunteer Work
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Unrequested labor, material provision, or logistical service performed in expectation of romantic credit. The credit is not disclosed. The expectation is not acknowledged. The work is real. The return is assumed. The Institute does not classify this as generosity. It classifies it as a transaction the other party did not agree to enter.
Apply This Vocabulary
These terms are active across all Institute instruments. If a definition applied to you, the following resources are the appropriate next steps.