How divorce information is presented—framing assets, liabilities, or custody preferences—shapes what the other party understands and accepts; one side's framing naturally obscures or emphasizes different realities. Tools that make these framing choices visible, and explore how the same facts could be presented differently, create more equitable negotiation ground.
Asymmetric information framing refers to how AI models account for the fact that each party in a divorce negotiation holds different knowledge, priorities, and emotional stakes — and adjusts its outputs to help users understand the other side's likely perspective.
This concept is critical in AI-assisted divorce planning because one-sided inputs produce one-sided advice. When AI is prompted to model the informational gaps between divorcing parties, it produces more realistic negotiation strategies, helps users anticipate counteroffers, and reduces the likelihood of agreements that break down later.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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