📘 Student Example — Chronic Load Adaptation
This example demonstrates how the SMS Analyzer models stable cognition under sustained load without mislabeling adaptation as dysfunction. It is designed for supervised, small‑team learning in the RTT NoS sandbox.
This is a single‑session snapshot, intentionally incomplete. Interpretation improves only across multiple sessions.
Scenario Overview#
Scenario type: Chronic Load Adaptation
Context: Ongoing cognitive and environmental demands over an extended period
Goal: Learn how structure adapts under load and how regime context stabilizes interpretation
This scenario is selected when a subject appears functional and coherent, yet reports persistent fatigue, reduced flexibility, or narrowed attention.
Activated Modules#
- Sensory Branch Modeling (all)
- Triadic Integration (always active)
- Regime Context Block
- Environmental Context (inactive)
- AI‑Augmentation Adapter (inactive)
Sensory Branch Snapshot (Relative Values)#
Values are comparative, not measured.
| Sense | Resonance | Emotional Coherence | Memory Access | Cognitive Load | Grounding | Routing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smell | Low | Stable | Normal | Low | High | Direct |
| Sight | Moderate | Stable | Normal | High | Moderate | Mediated |
| Hearing | Moderate | Stable | Normal | High | Moderate | Mediated |
| Touch | Low | Stable | Normal | Moderate | High | Direct |
| Taste | Low | Stable | Normal | Low | High | Direct |
Students should note elevated load without fragmentation.
Triadic Integration Results#
Dominant‑Sense Model#
- Dominant contributors: Sight, Hearing
- Whole‑Mind State: Stable under load
Weighted Integration Model#
- Distribution: Even, with elevated visual and auditory load
- Whole‑Mind State: Sustained tension, adaptive
Invariant‑Driven Model#
- Primary strain: Load–Coherence Stability
- Whole‑Mind State: Compressed but coherent
Observation: All three models converge on stability, despite elevated load.
Regime Context (Structural Layer)#
{
"consciousnessRegime": {
"primary": "Reflective",
"confidence": 0.74
},
"lifeRegimeProfile": {
"current": "Sustained High Load",
"baseline": "Adaptive Stability"
},
"structuralPosture": {
"orientation": "Stabilizing",
"flexibility": 0.48,
"compression": 0.42
},
"measurementIntegrity": "Green",
"regimeMismatchFlags": []
}This context explains why elevated load does not imply instability.
Student‑Visible Summary#
- Whole‑Mind State: Stable under sustained load
- Primary posture: Reflective, task‑oriented
- Life context: Ongoing high demand
- Trajectory: Stable, low drift
- Key contributors: Visual and auditory load
No alerts or warnings are surfaced.
Structural Interpretation Notes (Instructor‑Guided)#
- Elevated load can coexist with coherence.
- Compression reflects adaptation, not failure.
- Without regime context, this session could be misread as early dysfunction.
- Additional sessions would clarify whether flexibility rebounds or continues to narrow.
Students should ask:
“What would change our interpretation if the load were removed?”
Learning Takeaways#
- Chronic load produces structural compression, not immediate breakdown.
- Regime context prevents false positives.
- Stability is not the absence of strain.
- Interpretation requires patience across sessions.
Safety Reminder#
This example is for educational use only.
It does not represent diagnosis, treatment, or personal assessment.