10Q Protocol™


Spirit ID Duality™ — PK‑Based Yes/No Verification Framework

Overview


The 10Q Protocol™ is a standardized yes/no interrogation framework within Metapsychics Science™, designed to evaluate whether a communicative source exhibits identity‑bearing coherence across controlled sessions.

It integrates Spirit ID Duality™ — the dual‑channel model of semantic intent and measurable physical responses — with a structured sequence of ten verification questions.

The protocol does not evaluate narrative content. It evaluates signal behavior.

Purpose of the 10Q Protocol™

  • Response coherence — coupling between semantic intent and physical response patterns.
  • Signal stability — reproducible yes/no responses across repeated trials.
  • Operator‑independent output — responses free from conscious or unconscious influence.
  • Identity‑pattern invariance — a consistent signal signature persisting across sessions.

The Dual‑Channel Structure

The 10Q Protocol™ relies on the two channels of Spirit ID Duality™:

  • Semantic Channel — the intended yes/no meaning.
  • Physical Response Channel — measurable event-stream responses recorded under controlled conditions.

The protocol evaluates whether the two channels show non‑random cross‑coherence.

The 10 Verification Questions

Grouped into three analytical tiers:

Tier 1 — Identity Baseline (Q1–Q3)

Tests initial consistency and regularity.

Tier 2 — Cross‑Temporal Invariance (Q4–Q6)

Checks pattern stability across multiple sessions.

Tier 3 — Duality Convergence (Q7–Q10)

Direct semantic–physical alignment tests.

Interpretation Criteria

A session meets threshold when:

  • ≥ 80% of responses show coherence above baseline noise
  • ≥ 2 tiers demonstrate cross‑temporal invariance
  • physical patterns show operator‑independence
  • semantic and physical channels remain phase‑aligned

Sessions failing any criterion are classified as non‑coherent.

Scientific Position

The 10Q Protocol™ is a signal‑theoretic evaluation framework.
It measures stability, coherence, invariance, and non‑randomness in yes/no response streams.
It does not assert identity — it identifies identity‑correlated signal behavior.