Successful divorce negotiation requires understanding not just what each side wants but what each side actually knows; when one party has fuller information about finances, health, or custody realities, the negotiation itself becomes asymmetrical regardless of goodwill. Modeling these information gaps—and consciously working to close them—can shift negotiation from strategic leverage toward mutual understanding.
Asymmetric information modeling refers to AI techniques that account for the fact that divorcing spouses rarely have equal knowledge of shared assets, debts, income streams, or legal options, and that this imbalance often leads to unfair settlements for the less-informed party.
AI tools built around this concept help users identify what they do not know, generate the right questions to ask, and flag financial or legal blind spots before they become costly mistakes in a settlement agreement.
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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