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The Standard Coherence Fidelity Layer (SCFL) is an upstream measurement infrastructure for detecting coherence loss, drift, and regime-shift precursors across critical interdependent systems — before they crystallize as correlated losses, cascading failures, or visible operational rupture. Conventional risk and observability tools measure downstream state: utilization, dependencies, topology, post-failure outcomes, and lagged correlation. SCFL proposes a different primitive — the real-time synchronization state of operational seams themselves — and formalizes it through coherence tensors, drift velocity, recoverability windows, propagation geometry, and seam-level observability as candidate operational variables. This consolidated technical reference brings together, in a single document, the SCFL framework end-to-end: • Operator-level mathematics (Appendix A.1.1) defining coherence, drift, and recoverability primitives in reproducible form, intended to be independently implementable on synthetic or live telemetry; • Cross-domain validation evidence spanning ERCOT grid telemetry, hospital operational regimes, maritime and port logistics, and reinsurance/balance-sheet coupling — demonstrating operator equivalence across structurally distinct infrastructures; • Sovereign-to-sovereign seam analysis (Appendix C) extending the framework to coherence couplings that propagate across jurisdictional boundaries, with application to cross-border systemic risk; • Quantitative methods summary (Appendix F) detailing parameter estimation pathways, shadow-mode validation strategy, and the empirical procedures used to identify rupture precursors that lead conventional correlation signals; • Scope, limitations, and disclaimers (Section 7) explicitly noting which validation tiers rest on operational telemetry versus synthetic composite reconstructions, and where institutional integration is still required for full operationalization. SCFL is positioned within the historical lineage of observability science — extending the conceptual trajectory of phasor measurement units (PMUs), early-warning bifurcation theory, systemic risk metrics including CoVaR, temporal synchronization analysis, and resilience engineering — into a unified, cross-domain measurement substrate. The framework’s central argument is that modern infrastructures share a common blind spot: structurally intact systems can silently lose upstream synchronization coherence long before downstream rupture becomes visible. SCFL is proposed as a candidate measurement layer for that hidden deformation, designed to be a leading rather than coincident signal for risk, reinsurance, and critical-infrastructure operators. This document consolidates and supersedes prior draft circulations. It is published as a working paper supplementing the formal SCFL papers: Coherence Physics (doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20115910) and Sovereign-to-Sovereign Seams (doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20172476).
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Ron Brogdon (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a080a41a487c87a6a40c346 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20175467
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Ron Brogdon
Stratasys (Israel)
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