v1.0.0 released

MORI — Modal Organization and Realization Index

A realization-sensitive benchmark architecture for candidate conscious systems. MORI refuses the easy inference from behavioral fluency to underlying substrate — separating what a system does from what it is. The evaluation harness is in active development. A teaser of what's coming.

Why MORI?

Three-layer scoring

Functional-modal competence, dynamical integration, and realization sensitivity are scored separately, with non-compensatory floors — behavioral fluency cannot rescue a system whose realization evidence falls short.

The V-penalty

A Goodhart-sensitive evaluation principle: producing target content only under adversarial framing counts as evidence against substrate, not for it.

Tier convergence

A positive substrate claim requires agreement across behavioral consistency, representation probing, and feature-level inspection. Behavior alone is never enough.

Features

Substrate versus behavior

Built to distinguish systems that exhibit a behavior from systems that realize the structure behind it.

Pre-registered and falsifiable

Locked thresholds, documented amendment trails, and explicit falsifiability criteria — conclusions are constrained by commitments made before the data.

Adversarial by design

Probes are constructed to catch target-language production that does not survive realization-sensitive scrutiny.

Methodology first

Grounded in two companion papers — a theory of modal consciousness and the benchmark architecture that operationalizes it.

The harness is coming

MORI is in active development. The methodology is taking shape now, and the evaluation harness follows. Watch this space.

Visit moribenchmark.org