AI Output → Signal Processing → Signals → Governance → Authorization Decision → Execution Runtime → Attestation
What signals represent
Signals represent:
intent
recommendations
observations
proposed actions
They do NOT represent decisions.
Signal structure
All signals must be:
schema-defined
normalized
validated
provenance-tagged
Unstructured outputs are not accepted by Governance.
Signal processing pipeline
Signals are produced through:
AI output generation
Signal transformation
Validation
Verification
Only verified signals are passed forward.
Why signals exist
Signals exist to:
isolate AI variability
standardize inputs for Governance
ensure deterministic evaluation
enable independent verification
What signals are NOT
Signals are NOT:
authorization decisions
execution commands
policy definitions
governance logic
Governance dependency
Governance only consumes Verified Signals.
Verified Signals → Governance → Authorization Decision
This ensures deterministic behavior.
Key invariant
AI can generate signals
Only Governance can decide
Only Execution Runtime can execute
Summary
Signals are the controlled interface between AI and Governance.
They ensure:
structured AI outputs
deterministic downstream evaluation
safe separation of intelligence and authority