Human Behavior FCA · 2.1
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2 Behavior Generation Chain · 2.1 Observable Output

2.1 Observable Output

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

Observable output is the chain-entry point for tracing, not the causal endpoint.

Output forms include action, stall, repetition, interruption, lock-in, and update.

The same visible output can come from different breakpoints in the chain.

Control Variables

Output frequency.

Trigger input type and context.

Output duration and interruption point.

Repetition interval and amplitude.

Whether feedback update changes structure afterward.

Causal Chain

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

Observable output is read first, then traced back through foreground entry and downstream allocation.

Without tracing into historical template matching and new-structure generation, output stays a surface record.

Observable Outputs

Repeatable action sequences appear under similar triggers.

Shift from high-frequency repetition to lower-frequency update is measurable.

Post-feedback output change directly tests whether chain update occurred.

Boundary

A single output event cannot define system structure.

Output cannot directly infer personality traits.

Output must enter full-chain tracing before breakpoint attribution.