A General Theory of Regulatory Instability: Threshold Dynamics, Load Distribution, and Nonlinear Release

29 April 2026, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Psychological systems regulate internal activation under persistent demands, yet existing theories inadequately explain abrupt nonlinear breakdowns like aggression and self-regulatory collapse. This paper presents a general theory of regulatory instability where failure emerges from dynamic threshold degradation, load distribution variance, and delayed release amplification. Instability occurs when localized activation breaches plastic thresholds following sustained regulatory strain, not merely from total load. The model integrates drive theory, frustration-aggression, allostasis, and self-regulation into a unified formal framework with precise, falsifiable predictions across behavioral, physiological, and neural levels.

Keywords

self-regulation
aggression
stress
allostasis
threshold dynamics
instability. Introduction

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