English

Cognitive Warfare: Definition, Framework, and Case Study

Social and Information Networks 2026-03-06 v1 Computers and Society Human-Computer Interaction

Abstract

Cognitive warfare has emerged as a central feature of modern conflict, yet it remains inconsistently defined and difficult to evaluate. Existing approaches often treat cognitive operations as a subset of information operations, limiting the ability to assess cognitive attacker-defender interactions or determine when advantage has been achieved. This article proposes a unified definition of cognitive warfare, introduces an interaction framework grounded in the OODA loop, and identifies measurable attributes associated with cognitive superiority. To illustrate the use of the framework, a notional case study demonstrates how these concepts can be applied to assess cognitive attacks and defenses in a contested environment. Thus, the framework provides joint force leaders and analysts with a practical foundation for understanding, comparing, and evaluating cognitive warfare campaigns.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2603.05222,
  title  = {Cognitive Warfare: Definition, Framework, and Case Study},
  author = {Bonnie Rushing and William Hersch and Shouhuai Xu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2603.05222},
  year   = {2026}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T11:04:58.812Z