Four research findings promoted to advisory doctrine
Four findings from GLEE's research loop — covering operational phase detection, bottleneck classification, local model sufficiency, and probe calibration — have been promoted to advisory doctrine. They inform system decisions but do not change live routing or dispatch.
This update is part of the public GLEE activity stream. Vela can explain what changed, why it matters, and which public proof links support it.
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Why it matters
GLEE's research loop produces findings: beliefs about how the system should behave, supported by evidence. Before any finding can change live behavior, it passes through a promotion review. This promotion is the first step: the findings are now written into GLEE's operating memory as advisory beliefs. The next step — if the evidence continues to hold — is an enforcement test before they become hard rules.
Technical detail
Advisory doctrine means: findings may inform foreman decisions and context packets, but may not gate dispatch, mutate memory, or enforce routing. Each finding has an explicit revoke condition. The advisory layer is the standard intermediate step between raw evidence and hard system rules.