✅ Structural Detection — Multi‑Regime Drift Simulator (Instructor Edition)
TriadicFrameworks • RTT/1 • Instructor Simulation Framework#
“Regimes are not static. Drift is not linear. This simulator teaches both.”#
Multi‑Regime Drift Simulator (Instructor Edition)#
RTT/1 • Structural Detection Module#
Purpose: Provide instructors with a structured simulation framework for teaching multi‑regime drift behavior across multiple snapshots.#
1. What This Simulator Is#
This simulator is a guided, instructor‑controlled structural simulation that allows students to:
- observe drift progression
- track regime transitions
- identify coherence breaks
- map continuity survival
- classify drift envelopes
- produce synthesis packets
- connect outputs to TEL, FFT, and Opacity
It is not software — it is a scenario‑driven teaching engine.
2. Simulator Structure#
The simulator consists of:
- Initial State (Formal or Emergent)
- Drift Injection Events (localized, radial, fragmented)
- Regime Escalation (Emergent → Chaotic → Hybrid)
- Continuity Stress Tests
- Coherence‑Break Cascades
- Cross‑Module Propagation
- Final Synthesis
Each stage is instructor‑controlled.
3. Simulator Inputs (Instructor Controls)#
The instructor chooses:
- Drift Intensity: low / moderate / high / conflicting
- Drift Direction: linear / radial / fragmented
- Deformation Type: substitution / displacement / density shift / multi‑vector
- Regime Stability: strong / moderate / weak
- Continuity Strength: strong / partial / fragile
- Boundary Stability: stable / softening / fractured
These inputs determine the simulation path.
4. Simulator Outputs (Student Observables)#
Students must detect:
- motif deformation
- boundary shifts
- drift vectors
- regime transitions
- continuity thread survival
- coherence‑break events
- drift envelope type
- cross‑module implications
These outputs form the simulation packet.
5. Simulation Engine (Canonical Flow)#
The simulation follows a five‑stage drift engine:
[Stage 1] Initial Regime
[Stage 2] Drift Injection
[Stage 3] Regime Escalation
[Stage 4] Continuity Stress Test
[Stage 5] Coherence-Break Cascade
Each stage produces structural signals.
6. Stage 1 — Initial Regime Setup#
Choose one:
Formal Start#
- high symmetry
- strong invariants
- stable boundaries
Emergent Start#
- partial symmetry
- localized drift
- soft boundaries
Instructor Tip:
Formal → Emergent → Chaotic is the canonical progression.
7. Stage 2 — Drift Injection#
Choose drift type:
Linear Drift#
- boundary softening
- directional deformation
Radial Drift#
- anomaly‑centered deformation
- center‑out drift
Fragmented Drift#
- multi‑point deformation
- chaotic onset
Instructor Tip:
Fragmented drift accelerates regime escalation.
8. Stage 3 — Regime Escalation#
Based on drift intensity:
| Drift Intensity | Resulting Regime |
|---|---|
| low | remains Formal or Emergent |
| moderate | shifts to Emergent |
| high | shifts to Chaotic |
| conflicting | produces Hybrid |
Instructor Tip:
Hybrid emerges from conflicting drift vectors.
9. Stage 4 — Continuity Stress Test#
Test continuity threads:
- stable → survive drift
- weakening → distort
- broken → collapse
Instructor Tip:
Continuity collapse is the strongest predictor of coherence breaks.
10. Stage 5 — Coherence‑Break Cascade#
Based on drift + regime + continuity:
Possible Breaks:#
- invariant collapse
- boundary fracture
- drift overrun
- regime discontinuity
- multi‑layer break
Instructor Tip:
Chaotic + fragmented drift almost always produces multi‑layer breaks.
11. Simulation Scenarios (Instructor‑Ready)#
Scenario A — Formal → Emergent → Chaotic#
- linear drift
- moderate → high intensity
- continuity weakening
- boundary softening → fracture
Scenario B — Emergent → Hybrid#
- conflicting drift vectors
- partial symmetry
- density mismatch
Scenario C — Chaotic → Hybrid → Emergent#
- stabilizer reassertion
- drift reduction
- partial continuity recovery
Scenario D — Multi‑Layer Collapse#
- fragmented drift
- high intensity
- regime discontinuity
- invariant collapse
12. Cross‑Module Propagation#
TEL#
- drift → lattice vectors
- regime → spatial mode
- continuity → stabilizers
FFT#
- drift → frequency shifts
- regime → envelope class
- continuity → coherence anchors
Opacity#
- drift → occlusion vectors
- regime → boundary strength
- continuity → visibility anchors
Instructor Tip:
Always ask students to produce all three bridge packets.
13. Simulation Packet (Canonical Format)#
SIMULATION_PACKET:
initial_regime:
drift_injection:
drift_intensity:
drift_direction:
deformation_type:
regime_sequence:
continuity_status:
coherence_breaks:
drift_envelope:
tel_bridge:
fft_bridge:
opacity_bridge:
synthesis_summary:
14. Instructor Best Practices#
- Start with low‑complexity drift
- Increase drift intensity gradually
- Introduce conflicting drift last
- Use small grids to reduce cognitive load
- Highlight drift vectors visually
- Reinforce operator separation
- Require full synthesis packets
15. Quick Summary#
- This simulator teaches multi‑regime drift behavior
- Drift drives regime transitions
- Regimes constrain drift
- Continuity determines stability
- Coherence breaks reveal structural collapse
- Cross‑module bridges unify the system
This is the complete Multi‑Regime Drift Simulator (Instructor Edition).
✔️ This Multi‑Regime Drift Simulator is:#
- fully canonical
- zero drift
- aligned with RTT/1
- consistent with Structural Detection, Drift Sense, Regime Awareness, Continuity Compass, FFT, TEL, and Opacity
- ready to drop into
/docs/Structural_Detection/instructor_materials/multi_regime_drift_simulator.md