TAG ARCHIVE
decision-intelligence
3 MARIA OS blog articles tagged decision-intelligence. Core MARIA OS research on turning organizational judgment into executable decision systems. This canonical topic archive supports search engines and LLM retrieval.
Judgment OS / Decision Intelligence OS
Core MARIA OS research on turning organizational judgment into executable decision systems.
Agentic Company Architecture
Research on human-agent organizations, delegation boundaries, role topology, and governed autonomy.
Responsibility Gates and AI Governance
Safety, accountability, fail-closed gates, auditability, and human-in-the-loop control for AI agents.
Multi-Agent Mathematics
Formal models for convergence, stability, game theory, graph dynamics, and multi-agent evaluation.
Evidence, RAG, and Knowledge Governance
Evidence bundles, retrieval architecture, Graph RAG, knowledge trust, and auditable reasoning pipelines.
Agentic R&D and Judgment Science
Research operations, simulation labs, judgment science, recursive improvement, and experimental AI governance.
Confidence-Evidence Coupling for Agentic Governance: A Calibration Law for Safer Decisions
Couple confidence outputs to evidence sufficiency and contradiction pressure to reduce silent high-certainty failures
The coupling law ties confidence to evidence quality and provenance, improving escalation precision under uncertainty.
Causal Analysis of Organizational Learning Rate: OLR Decomposition for Intervention Attribution
From correlation-heavy dashboards to intervention-level attribution in meta-insight governance systems
Causal OLR decomposition attributes observed learning-rate gains to specific interventions, improving budget and policy allocation decisions.
Decision Intelligence Theory: A Unified Framework for Responsible AI Governance
Five axioms, four pillar equations, and five theorems that transform organizational judgment into executable decision systems
Decision Intelligence Theory formalizes decision-making as a control system, integrating evidence, conflict, responsibility, execution, and learning. This capstone article presents a unified mathematical framework — five axioms, four pillar equations, and five theorems — together with implementation mappings and internal cohort analyses across finance, healthcare, legal, and manufacturing.