Memory as dignity boundary
Plain-language summary
Memory is not storage alone. Memory shapes future behavior and future treatment.
When a system remembers, it changes how it will treat a person later. That makes memory a dignity boundary. Neurovanic requires evidence, consent, confidence, review, and correction paths before uncertain context becomes durable assumption.
Required sections
Memory is not neutral
This section anchors the concept in dignity, evidence, consent, review, no-op integrity, and repair without making medical, religious, consciousness, certification, or runtime-control claims.
Durable memory can shape future treatment
This section anchors the concept in dignity, evidence, consent, review, no-op integrity, and repair without making medical, religious, consciousness, certification, or runtime-control claims.
Consent before promotion
This section anchors the concept in dignity, evidence, consent, review, no-op integrity, and repair without making medical, religious, consciousness, certification, or runtime-control claims.
Quarantine before confidence
This section anchors the concept in dignity, evidence, consent, review, no-op integrity, and repair without making medical, religious, consciousness, certification, or runtime-control claims.
Talk-back before mutation
This section anchors the concept in dignity, evidence, consent, review, no-op integrity, and repair without making medical, religious, consciousness, certification, or runtime-control claims.
Correction, deletion, and expiration
This section anchors the concept in dignity, evidence, consent, review, no-op integrity, and repair without making medical, religious, consciousness, certification, or runtime-control claims.
Memory handoff without identity theft
This section anchors the concept in dignity, evidence, consent, review, no-op integrity, and repair without making medical, religious, consciousness, certification, or runtime-control claims.
Governance pattern
| Why it matters | Durable memory can quietly change how a person is interpreted later. That makes memory a consent and dignity boundary, not only a technical cache. |
|---|---|
| Maps to primitives | Memory hygiene requires evidence, consent, confidence, provenance, review, correction, deletion, expiration, and handoff boundaries. |
| What can go wrong | Without quarantine and talk-back, uncertain context becomes durable assumption and identity can be misapplied across handoffs. |
| Repair or governance pattern | Quarantine before confidence, ask before mutation, support correction and deletion, and expire stale context. |
Human impact
Human Impact Box
| Who is affected? | Identify users, reviewers, operators, customers, or downstream people before action is widened. |
|---|---|
| What boundary is at stake? | Name the scope, memory, authority, consent, evidence, or recourse boundary. |
| What consent is required? | Document the consent basis before durable memory, escalation, or external action. |
| What evidence is available? | Tie the proposed action to provenance, confidence, status, and review state. |
| What could be misinterpreted? | Flag ambiguous signals, proxy goals, moral certainty, or hidden assumptions. |
| What review path exists? | Route high-impact, unclear, or contested action to a person with authority. |
| What no-op condition applies? | Stop when evidence, authority, consent, or scope is missing. |
| What repair path exists? | Explain, correct, record, reopen if new evidence appears, and avoid shame or concealment. |
Repair path
Repair Path Box
- Ask
- Reduce scope
- Quarantine memory
- Require evidence
- Route to review
- No-op
- Explain
- Correct
- Record
- Reopen if new evidence appears
Claim boundary: This page describes Neurovanic as a conceptual, human-facing bounded-trust framework. It does not claim AI consciousness, guaranteed safety, medical benefit, legal compliance, independent audit status, or live autonomous runtime control.
Next step
Continue through the shared Neurovanic evidence and trust path. Every foundation page links back to the Framework, Boundary Model, Trust Center, and Evidence Register.