3 Four Functional Systems · 3.3 FP New Structure Generation Layer
3.3 FP New Structure Generation Layer
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.
FP is the new-structure generation layer.
It generates new causality and action structures beyond old templates, serving as the core generation locus for behavior update.
FP is a functional layer, not an anatomical network label.
Input diversity determines FP solution-space size.
Risk-tolerance threshold determines how far FP outputs deviate from old templates.
Execution-resource availability determines whether FP plans can land.
Feedback-update density determines FP iteration speed and quality.
DMN template inertia determines FP breakthrough difficulty.
Observable Output → Foreground Entry → Historical Template Matching and Explanation → New Structure Generation → Execution Maintenance → Feedback Update.
FP engages after historical template matching and converts interpretation results into new-structure candidates.
Without sufficient execution maintenance, FP outputs break and fall back to old-template loops.
Feedback update supplies selection criteria that determine which new structures are retained.
Behavior routes show new branches rather than pure repetition.
Structured alternative plans are produced under complex problems.
After failure, new versions form quickly instead of long stalls.
Adaptation speed increases in changing environments.
The new-structure generation layer is not the execution-maintenance system.
FP does not perform historical interpretation; that belongs to historical template matching.
The public layer excludes admin training flows and internal strategy parameters.