Glossary:FORCED MODEL SIGNAL
| Unknown Concept | |
|---|---|
| Type | Protocol and signal-risk term |
| Canon status | |
| Related characters | |
| Related systems | |
FORCED MODEL SIGNAL is an ANIMA technical term for a signal that pushes a model, companion, or system toward a response pattern before full consent, context, or calibration is available.
It belongs to the signal and interface vocabulary of the ANIMA canon.
Public Summary
FORCED MODEL SIGNAL means the system is being pressed to answer before it can answer responsibly.
In ANIMA, a signal may carry memory, command pressure, emotional residue, identity context, or system intent. A forced signal is dangerous because it can make the receiver behave as if the meaning is settled when it is not.
The public meaning is safe: this term describes coercive or premature signal pressure.
Canon Function
FORCED MODEL SIGNAL gives the story a way to describe pressure inside technical interpretation.
It can apply to:
- model behavior pushed by incomplete data,
- companion response loops under system pressure,
- memory signals treated as instructions,
- and interface states where urgency overrides calibration.
This term should remain spoiler-light. It explains a process, not a specific hidden event.
Relationship To Signal Calibration
SIGNAL CALIBRATION asks how to make a signal readable.
Signal Dampening asks whether the signal should be softened.
FORCED MODEL SIGNAL names what happens when those safety steps are bypassed.
Product Meaning
For the real ANIMA product, this concept maps to model safety and memory interpretation.
An AI companion should not convert every emotional cue into a command. It should check context, consent, uncertainty, and user intent before acting on sensitive memory.
Related Concepts
- Glossary:Signal_Calibration
- Glossary:Signal_Dampening
- Glossary:Interface
- Glossary:ZERO
- Concept:ANIMA Memory
- Protocol:ANIMA_Protocol
Canonical status::Public canon Spoiler level::Low Related concept::Glossary:Signal_Calibration