Human Behavior FCA · 6.4
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6 Application Index · 6.4 Behavioral Repetition

6.4 Behavioral Repetition

Human Behavior FCA

This page is structured as definition, control variables, causal chain, observable outputs, and boundary, and serves as a canonical definition node in Human Behavior FCA.

Definition

Behavioral repetition means the chain repeatedly runs the same generation route, not merely repeating one action.

The source may sit in SN, DMN, FP, ECN, or feedback update.

Valid localization requires explicit source-node identification.

Control Variables

Repetition-trigger input.

Repetition interval.

Consistency of historical-template invocation.

Degree of new-structure absence.

Whether feedback changes the next cycle.

Causal Chain

Observable Output → Foreground Entry → Historical Template Matching and Explanation → New Structure Generation → Execution Maintenance → Feedback Update.

Behavioral repetition must be localized along the full chain to identify entry bias, interpretation fallback, generation failure, maintenance breakdown, or feedback absorption.

Recording repetition surface only, without node localization, leads to wrong intervention point.

Observable Outputs

The same decision route appears repeatedly across cycles.

Post-feedback processing returns to the same input filtering and interpretation mode.

Alternative-route count stays near zero over time.

Boundary

Do not reduce it to habit labeling.

Do not reduce it to personality labeling.

Do not reduce it to willpower framing.