Situational Framing: Points and Segments Core Context A Environmental Awareness B Relevance & Process C Integration D Actionable Outcomes E Spatial & Value F Temporal & Decision 1. Sensing 2. Prioritizing 3. Coherence 4. Implementation 5. Boundaries 6. Timing < Neuroscience-Based Situational Framing Framework BRAIN CORE Limbic System & Striatum Networks Sensory Perception (Environmental Awareness) Visual, Auditory, Somatosensory & Multisensory Integration Prefrontal Functions (Relevance & Process) Executive Functions & Working Memory Neural Synchronization (Integration) Default Mode & Salience Networks Motor Functions (Actionable Outcomes) Motor Cortex & Cerebellum Parietal Functions (Spatial & Value) Spatial Processing & Value Computation Frontal-Temporal (Temporal & Decision) Timing Circuits & Decision Networks Neurobiological framework showing brain regions that correspond to each situational dimension Situational Framing: Hexagonal Framework CONTEXT The Core Element Environmental Awareness Sensing context, monitoring changes & gathering inputs Relevance & Process Determining priorities & adapting methods Integration Maintaining coherence across all dimensions Actionable Outcomes Implementation, responses & measurable results Spatial & Value Defining boundaries & determining worth Temporal & Decision Managing timing & making choices The hexagonal framework shows how all dimensions interact around the central contextual core Situational Framing: Left Face - Spatial & Value Dimensions SPATIAL Contextual Boundaries VALUE Environmental Worth CONTEXT Scope Definition Boundary Conditions Success Criteria Outcome Valuation Left Face Components Spatial Dimension: • Scope Definition: Determining the appropriate scale and reach of decisions • Boundary Conditions: Identifying the limits and constraints of the situation Value Dimension: • Success Criteria: Defining what constitutes value in a specific context • Outcome Valuation: Measuring worth based on contextual requirements Situational Framing: Right Face - Relevance & Process Dimensions RELEVANCE Situational Importance PROCESS Contextual Mechanisms CONTEXT Priority Determination Situational Significance Methodological Adaptation Procedural Calibration Right Face Components Relevance Dimension: • Priority Determination: Establishing what matters most in a given context • Situational Significance: Identifying which factors have the greatest impact Process Dimension: • Methodological Adaptation: Adjusting approaches to fit contextual requirements • Procedural Calibration: Fine-tuning processes based on situational factors Situational Framing: Front Face - Temporal & Decision Dimensions TEMPORAL Environmental Timing DECISION Situational Choices CONTEXT Action Windows Timing Constraints Option Selection Choice Validation Front Face Components Temporal Dimension: • Action Windows: Time periods when interventions are most effective • Timing Constraints: Limitations imposed by environmental timing factors Decision Dimension: • Option Selection: Choosing from contextually appropriate alternatives • Choice Validation: Verifying decisions against situational requirements Situational Framing: Back Face - Integration Dimension INTEGRATION Environmental Coherence CONTEXT Systemic Holistic Cross- dimensional Unified Coherent Aligned From Other Dimensions To Other Dimensions Integration Dimension Components The Integration dimension serves as the cohesive force that: • Ensures systemic coherence across all components of the framework • Maintains holistic perspective to prevent fragmented decision-making • Facilitates cross-dimensional connections for consistent responses • Creates unified and aligned approaches that respect contextual requirements This face maintains cohesion across the entire framework Situational Framing: Top Face - Environmental Awareness ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS Sensing • Monitoring • Understanding Environmental Scanning Contextual Intelligence Situational Monitoring Signal Interpretation CONTEXT Environmental Inputs To Contextual Processing Environmental Awareness Components • Environmental Scanning: Detection of signals and changes in the external environment • Contextual Intelligence: Ability to interpret environmental signals in their proper context • Situational Monitoring: Continuous tracking of relevant conditions and their changes • Signal Interpretation: Converting raw environmental data into meaningful insights Situational Framing: Bottom Face - Actionable Outcomes ACTIONABLE OUTCOMES Implementation • Response • Results Decision Implementation Contextual Response Measurable Results Value Creation CONTEXT From Contextual Processing Back to Environment Actionable Outcomes Components • Decision Implementation: Turning situational choices into tangible actions • Contextual Response: Actions calibrated to the specific environmental conditions • Measurable Results: Quantifiable impacts that can be evaluated against objectives • Value Creation: Generating benefits aligned with contextually-defined success criteria