Been too busy to post much – I apologize for that. Work has been moving fast on two fronts here.
The first is practical and procedural: patent filing. The second is conceptual and potentially much larger: whether a new four-track model of human memory can inform future large language model architecture. One is about protecting a method. The other is about extending a way of seeing. Let’s go over the first of two patent filings first.
On the patents, the main point is that progress is real even when the public-facing machinery looks slow. Filing has been completed on the provisional track, and as anyone who has danced with USPTO systems knows, there is often a lag between submission, delivery, intake, and visible appearance in the online account systems. That lag is not unusual by itself. It is administrative weather, not necessarily a signal of trouble. The more important reality is that the ideas have been reduced to writing, structured, illustrated where needed, and pushed across the threshold from private concept into formal record. That matters. Too many people treat invention as inspiration. In practice, invention becomes real when it is documented well enough that another person could understand what problem is being solved, how the mechanism works, and why the implementation differs from the ordinary run of the mill.
There is also a discipline effect to patent work that outsiders rarely appreciate. Filing forces a kind of engineering honesty. Loose metaphors have to harden into claims. Hand-waving has to become flow. Diagrams have to agree with text. Terms have to stay nailed down from abstract through specification. Numbers on drawings must match text descriptions – all hungry for time.
Even when a filing is only provisional, the act of creating it improves the invention because it forces the inventor to separate what is merely suggestive from what is actually teachable. In that sense, the filing process is not just legal protection. It is a compression algorithm for thought.
The second front may prove even more important over time.
The new Four Track Human Memory Model began as a way of reframing human memory not as a single storage bin, but as a layered and interacting system. In its current form, the model distinguishes immediate awareness, longer-horizon narrative memory, embodied or physiological memory, and deeper biological persistence. Whether every detail of that framing survives future scrutiny is less important than the structural move itself: memory may be better understood as a mixed architecture than as a single function.
That is where the bridge to LLMs begins.
Current large language models are astonishingly capable, but much of their capability still rides on a relatively flattened notion of memory. Big memories of mega cores. But there is another way.
LLMs have weights, context windows, retrieval layers, tool access, and sometimes external stores, but these are usually treated as engineering modules rather than as a consciously integrated memory ecology. The Four Track model suggests a different path. Instead of asking only how to make a model bigger, faster, or more current, we can ask whether machine cognition improves when memory is partitioned into distinct but interacting layers with different persistence, authority, and read-write rules.
A simple mapping starts to suggest itself.
Track One, immediate awareness, looks a lot like the active context window: what is in play right now, volatile but high-resolution. Scans X posts, feed flows….
Track Two, longer-horizon narrative memory, resembles persistent conversation memory, user history, project state, and external retrieval indexed around continuity of self or task. ReseartGate, Wiki – if that begins to clear it for you?
Track Three, embodied memory, does not map cleanly onto current LLMs because models do not have bodies in the human sense. But it may have an analog in system-state memory: latency conditions, tool success history, interface friction, user emotional cadence, and broader environmental signals that shape response quality even when they are not explicit in the prompt.
Track Four, deep biological persistence, may loosely correspond to the stable substrate of the LLM model itself: weights, fine-tuning, constitutional priors, and core identity constraints that shape all outputs even when they are never directly surfaced.
This is where things get interesting. If the analogy holds even partly, then some of the limitations we see in present-day LLMs may come from poor alignment among memory tracks rather than insufficient raw intelligence.
A model may have the right answer latent in weights, relevant facts available via retrieval, and current user intent visible in the prompt, but still produce a shallow or distorted response because the interaction among layers is weak, noisy, or unscored. In other words, the issue may not always be missing information. It may be poor memory mixing.
That opens a possible architectural direction: instead of one monolithic inference pass, future models could perform a “mixdown” stage in which outputs are evaluated not just for token probability, but for cross-track coherence. Does the immediate answer fit the active prompt? Does it align with persistent user context? Does it respect system-state constraints? Does it remain consistent with deeper model priors and long-term task identity? A model built this way would not merely predict text. It would reconcile layers.
The Four Track model also points toward better handling of contradiction. Humans often experience inner conflict when one memory layer says one thing and another says something else. The same may be true in artificial systems. Retrieved documents may conflict with pretrained priors. Current user requests may conflict with long-standing preferences. Tool outputs may conflict with the model’s own internal expectation. Rather than burying that tension, a four-track-inspired architecture could score and expose it. That would allow for something closer to metacognitive honesty: “Here is what the immediate data suggests, here is what long-term context suggests, and here is where they do not yet agree.”
A deeper extension is possible. Human well-being may depend not only on how much memory exists, but on how well the tracks align. By analogy, machine usefulness may depend not only on knowledge volume, but on memory alignment. This may be one path toward something that looks, from the outside, like greater intelligence. Not IQ in the narrow benchmark sense, but a more stable, more self-consistent, more contextually faithful form of cognition. One might even say that what we currently call “reasoning” is sometimes just the visible surface of successful cross-track synchronization.
This does not mean machines are becoming human in any mystical sense. It means the engineering frontier may be shifting from scale alone to orchestration. Bigger models gave us surprising emergence. Better memory architecture may give us durable depth.
So that is where things stand. On one side, the patent work continues to turn speculative thought into formal structure. On the other, the Four Track model may be opening a path toward rethinking how machine systems remember, reconcile, and respond. One effort protects invention. The other may help define the next generation of it.
For the Hidden Guild, that is the real signal: not just building sharper tools, but building better models of mind itself.
Links to the SSRN paper when/if and ditto the PPA
~Anti-Dave