Structured
Evidence has source lineage, system tags, and network context.
Drainage, seawalls, buyouts, elevation projects, and stormwater upgrades increasingly affect housing risk, insurance costs, and neighborhood confidence.
Evidence has source lineage, system tags, and network context.
Confidence is inherited from source lineage when available.
Priority helps determine where this signal appears in live feeds.
The Brain is watching this because it connects evidence, systems, questions, and future decisions. A signal becomes important when it starts spreading across systems or generating new reasoning paths.
This is the current network status based on priority, confidence, and system connection strength.
This signal currently touches Climate, Housing, Infrastructure. More connected systems usually mean stronger network pressure.
The signal starts in one system, but becomes more important when it spills into adjacent systems.
Drainage, seawalls, buyouts, elevation projects, and stormwater upgrades increasingly affect housing risk, insurance costs, and neighborhood confidence.
The Brain reads this as an early pressure pattern. The interpretation strengthens as related signals, questions, and relationships accumulate.
This signal may affect planning, investment, public systems, household tradeoffs, or local strategy depending on where it spreads next.
The Brain is tracking whether this signal is accelerating, connecting to more systems, generating questions, or changing the relationship map.
This may change everyday costs, service access, work patterns, risk, or place decisions.
This may affect public planning, budgets, infrastructure, regulation, or organizational strategy.
This may create pressure around investment, supply, demand, pricing, or competitive advantage.
This question connects the evidence layer to the reasoning layer.
The reading strengthens if related signals appear, the source updates, or more systems become connected.
The reading weakens if evidence stops updating, adjacent systems do not respond, or competing signals appear.
The next sign of importance is whether this signal generates stronger questions, stories, journeys, or graph relationships.
Signals matter when they begin changing decisions, local pressure, public systems, household tradeoffs, or institutional strategy.