Human Behavior FCA · 2.5
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2 Behavior Generation Chain · 2.5 Execution Maintenance

2.5 Execution Maintenance

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

ECN is the execution maintenance system that turns structure into sustained action and reality-facing output.

This stage focuses on stable execution, repetition load, and rhythm maintenance rather than new-structure invention.

Without execution maintenance, even strong plans remain conceptual.

Control Variables

Execution load capacity determines plan sustainability and stability.

Task-switching cost determines whether behavior chains break easily.

Reality resource constraints determine path feasibility.

Feedback reading frequency determines correction speed.

FP plan clarity determines ECN execution friction.

Causal Chain

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

After new-structure generation provides a route, execution maintenance turns it into stable action sequences.

Deviations produced during execution flow back through feedback update and calibrate the next cycle.

When execution-maintenance load is too high, the system regresses to conservative historical template matching.

Observable Outputs

Behavior continuity improves and execution interruptions drop.

The same plan is reusable across contexts with steadier quality.

Key actions are preserved under rising pressure.

Post-execution review becomes effective and next-cycle rollout accelerates.

Boundary

Execution maintenance is not the new-structure generation layer.

ECN does not explain input sources; interpretation belongs to historical template matching.

The public layer excludes admin execution-monitoring metrics and internal tuning rules.