Alphabetical Order

Work in progress.
Q Model (Quadranym Model of Word-Sensibility)
- A theoretical framework for dynamic cognition and meaning-making.
- Focuses on how entities (words, ideas, agents) are processed within a semantic context.
- Integrates feedback loops to mirror human cognition.
Description:
A theoretical semantic framework designed to explain how meaning is dynamically constructed and processed within both human cognition and AI systems. The Q model emphasizes orientation and responsiveness to dynamic contexts (e.g., I dropped the apple.).
Semantic Core
- The central mechanism that processes language alongside perception and action.
- Continuously adapts through feedback from both situational and dynamical contexts.
- Drives the construction of relevant responses by interacting with contextual inputs.
Description:
The fundamental mechanism of the Q model that integrates action, perception, and language to generate contextually relevant responses, using a continuous feedback loop with the environment. Represents the semantic aspect of the mechanism common to action, perception, and semantics. (Hypothesis of Embodied Language Cognition)
Word-Sensibility
- The principle that words are sensitive to their context and meaning evolves dynamically.
- Emphasizes responsiveness rather than static meaning or context for word sense.
Description:
The idea that words don’t have fixed meanings but adjust their sense based on the surrounding context. In the Q model, word-sensibility drives how words adapt to dynamic changes.
Quadranym
- A four-dimensional unit representing expansive, reductive, subjective, and objective facets.
- Provides a structure for processing how words, actions, or ideas evolve across contexts.
Description:
A fundamental unit in the Q model that reflects dynamic contextual shifts. Quadranyms help the system assess how entities interact by organizing them within four dimensions: expansive (E), reductive (R), subjective (S), and objective (O). It operates through two primary states—S (active/source) and O (passive/target)—with modes E and R guiding their evolution together.
General Quadranym
- Refers to broad categories that represent fundamental concepts, such as space, time, energy, and agent.
- These quadranyms are general because they apply across a wide range of contexts and form the foundational structure of meaning.
Description:
General quadranyms in the Q model capture overarching concepts like space, time, energy, and agent, which serve as the primary structure for processing meaning. They provide the basic framework for understanding context in a broad sense.
Relevant Quadranym
- Refers to specific, contextually-grounded instances of general quadranyms, such as room (space), walk (energy), later (time), and we (agent).
- These quadranyms are relevant because they reflect specific applications of general concepts.
Description:
Relevant quadranyms represent more specific instances of general quadranyms, bringing context and detail into the broader framework. For example, room is a relevant quadranym within the space general quadranym, and walk relates to the general quadranym of action.
Dynamic Quadranym Model (DQM)
- A model that dynamically shifts between potential and actual meanings based on context.
- Helps AI systems adapt in real time to evolving meanings and contexts.
- DQMs act as reference frames, ensuring adaptable responses to changing situations.
Description:
A proposed framework within the Q model that helps AI process meaning dynamically by shifting between actual (realized) and potential (unrealized) states of understanding. It fuses quadranyms with a regression-like model, bifurcating words between the X-Y axes and shifting along an axis depending on the moment of context. DQMs act as reference frames with one or more layers of DQMs, providing general (basic) and relevant (detailed) responses to changing situations.
Regression-Like Model (RLM)
- A model used for dynamically adapting based on historical data and current inputs.
- Adjusts relationships between words, contexts, and orientations dynamically.
Description:
A tool within the Q model that allows for real-time recalibration by adjusting relationships based on past experiences and new data inputs.
System A
- The input system responsible for capturing environmental stimuli and situational context.
- Provides external inputs to Systems B and C for further processing.
Description:
The system that gathers and processes external, observable data and situational inputs, offering them to other parts of the Q model for real-time adjustment. As a semantic system, it can be represented by a massive language model (MLM) like ChatGPT.
System B
- Processes dynamical context and generates the definitive points within the system.
- Plays a key role in internal regulation and active-actual orientation.
Description:
Responsible for processing internal, private responses and generating the definitive points that anchor the system’s understanding and response to stimuli. This system can provide orientation at different levels of granularity for massive language models (MLMs), improving generalization and metaphoric understanding.
System C
- Integrates emotional and cognitive dynamics, sending feedback to Systems A and B.
- Adjusts the system’s orientation dynamically based on emotional and cognitive factors.
- Receives self-identification opportunities by combining the inputs from Systems A and B.
Description:
The central processing unit within the Q model that oversees emotional and cognitive responses, adjusting how the system reacts in real-time. System C also plays a pivotal role in regulating feedback loops, refining orientation by integrating both situational inputs from System A and internal responses from System B. This combination provides self-identification opportunities, ensuring adaptable and nuanced behavior.
Dynamical Context
- Refers to the internal, private response system influenced by preexisting psychological and emotional expectations.
- Shapes the agent’s orientation toward a situation by adapting responses.
Description:
A self-regulating system that captures how agents orient themselves privately, in contrast to external situational changes, responding based on internal feedback and pre-existing mental models.
Situational Context
- Represents the external, observable conditions in which an event occurs.
- Provides factual inputs that shape the agent’s external orientation.
Description:
The broader, objective context in which an event takes place, offering environmental cues that shape how agents act and respond in a given situation.
Orientation
- Refers to how an agent positions itself in a given context, adapting to changing circumstances.
- Reflects the dynamic relationship between the current state (actual) and future possibilities (potential).
Description:
The process by which the agent adjusts its understanding or response within a context, balancing the actual state with potential outcomes. Orientations happen simultaneously at different granularities as general and relevant layers in the system, allowing for adaptive responses.
Active-Actual State
- The current, realized state of an entity or concept in the Q model.
- Serves as the definitive anchor for the system’s understanding.
Description:
Refers to the present, concrete understanding or orientation of a concept. It represents what is actively engaged with and realized in the system.
Passive-Potential State
- Represents unrealized possibilities or latent meaning within the system.
- Guides the Q model in anticipating potential outcomes.
Description:
The unrealized possibilities for a word, action, or idea, showing what it could become based on future interactions and contexts.
Definitive Point
- The reference or anchor for the active-actual state in a quadranym.
- Serves as the foundation for dynamic orientation within the system.
Description:
A key component of the Q model that anchors the system’s interpretation at a given moment. It represents the realized state upon which potential outcomes are assessed. The definitive point is a synergistic state with the environment that feels real to the agent, providing a sense of groundedness in real-time.
Zeropoint (Active-Actual State)
- The anchor for orientation from which potential outcomes are calculated.
- Provides stability to the system’s interpretation in real-time.
Description:
The source condition or definitive reference point within the Q model that stabilizes how entities orient themselves and assess future possibilities.
Normative Response
- A response that aligns with social, contextual, or situational norms.
- Reflects the system’s ability to adapt behavior based on real-time constraints and orientations provided by System B.
Description:
A key aspect of the Q model, a normative response is the system’s decision-making output that matches the expectations of social, environmental, or situational norms. System C selects from the options presented by System B, choosing the best course of action based on the real-time context. Each DQM represents a potential normative response, and the system’s goal is to find the most appropriate and relevant response for the given moment.
Energy Quadranym
- A quadranym focused on the interaction between engagement and behavior in energy dynamics.
- Used to model both physical and metaphorical energy interactions.
Description:
A specific type of quadranym that helps explain how energy (active or passive) operates within a dynamic system, whether in terms of motion, effort, or engagement.
Spatial Quadranym
- Models the dynamics of space using dimensions such as infinite, finite, void, and between.
- Helps in understanding how entities orient themselves spatially.
Description:
A framework for explaining spatial perception, focusing on the interaction between spatial potential (like void or emptiness) and actual spatial dimensions (finite or infinite).
Time Quadranym
- Focuses on the temporal dynamics of past, present, and future interactions.
- Models how time-based experiences anchor emotions and guide responses.
Description:
A model for understanding how time (past, present, future) interacts with emotions and meaning, showing how each moment opens potential and actual experiences.
Agent Quadranym
- Refers to quadranyms focused on personal or interpersonal dynamics, involving elements like Positive, Negative, Goal, and Self.
Description:
The agent quadranym captures the dynamic relationships between an individual’s goals, actions, and sense of self, reflecting personal orientations in different contexts. This quadranym helps model how agents interact with their environments and others.
Corollary Discharge
- A term from neuroscience that refers to feedback loops within the brain, helping distinguish between self-generated and external stimuli.
- In the Q model, it serves as an analogy for feedback loops between systems.
Description:
Originally a neuroscience concept, corollary discharge involves the brain sending a copy of motor commands to predict the outcomes of movements. In the Q model, this concept is adapted: rather than sending an action copy, the Q model provides orientation, ensuring the system adjusts based on both internal and external inputs, and coupling the system’s orientation with the situation. This interaction contributes to a sense of self-regulation and alignment with real-world conditions.
Prehensions (from Whitehead’s philosophy)
- Describes how entities interact or perceive each other in relation to one another.
- In the Q model, this concept relates to how entities grasp and process meaning through context.
Description:
A philosophical term that refers to how entities “grasp” or connect to each other, used in the Q model to describe how meanings interact in a dynamic system.
Nexus (from Whitehead’s philosophy)
- Represents the connection or interaction between actual entities in a system.
- In the Q model, refers to the semantic relationships between words or ideas.
Description:
The tangible connection or interaction between entities, words, or ideas within the Q model. Nexūs form the dynamic relationships that ground meaning.
Alphabetical Order
Active-Actual State
- The current, realized state of an entity or concept in the Q model.
- Serves as the definitive anchor for the system’s understanding.
Description:
Refers to the present, concrete understanding or orientation of a concept. It represents what is actively engaged with and realized in the system.

