https://chatgpt.com/share/69bdd370-4e64-8010-920d-6aff4cc70407
https://osf.io/hj8kd/files/osfstorage/69bdd291cb9d419aec45785b
Coordination-Episode Tick: The Natural Time Variable for Attractor-Based LLM and AGI Dynamics
From Token-Time to Semantic-Time in Hierarchical AI Reasoning
One-Paragraph Article Aim
This article introduces a new time framework for LLM and AGI analysis: the coordination-episode tick. The core claim is that token index, wall-clock time, and fixed low-level event counts are not the natural time variables for higher-order reasoning systems. For attractor-based AI, the natural unit of evolution is instead a variable-duration semantic episode in which multiple sub-processes are triggered, locally stabilized, coordinated, and folded into a higher-order decision state. The paper defines this tick formally, situates it between latent-state attractor theory and event-driven agent engineering, proposes a multi-scale runtime model, and outlines measurable predictions and failure modes.
0. Reader Contract and Scope
This article proposes a new time framework for LLM and AGI analysis. Its central claim is simple: for higher-order reasoning systems, token count and wall-clock time are often the wrong clocks. They remain useful for low-level implementation analysis, but they do not reliably capture the units in which semantically meaningful coordination actually occurs. When an AI system performs multi-step reasoning, activates multiple partial frames, retrieves memory, resolves internal tensions, tests local hypotheses, and only then produces a usable judgment, the natural unit of progress is not merely “one more token” or “another second elapsed.” The more natural unit is a coordination episode.
This article therefore introduces the concept of the Coordination-Episode Tick. A coordination-episode tick is a variable-duration semantic unit defined not by uniform time spacing, but by the completion of a bounded semantic process. Such a process begins when a meaningful trigger activates one or more local reasoning structures, and it ends when a locally stable and transferable output has been formed. In this framework, intelligence is treated not as a single homogeneous stream, but as a layered coordination process unfolding across interacting local basins, partial closures, and recursive compositions.
The article is not a claim about metaphysical consciousness, nor is it a final theory of AGI. It is instead an operational proposal about how to analyze the dynamics of higher-order AI systems. Its purpose is to provide a more natural state-indexing scheme for attractor-based reasoning models. The aim is not to abolish token-time or clock-time, but to show that these lower-level measures may be insufficient as the primary axes for describing semantic coordination, especially when one moves from base next-token generation to tool use, reflective loops, multi-step planning, or multi-agent orchestration.
The article also does not assume that an LLM or AGI system contains one single global attractor responsible for all cognition. On the contrary, the working hypothesis is that meaningful reasoning is better modeled as the interaction of multiple local semantic attractors, each responsible for a bounded subtask, local frame, or provisional interpretation. The main research problem is then no longer “does the system have an attractor?” but rather: what is the correct time variable for analyzing the activation, stabilization, competition, and composition of these local structures?
At the most compressed level, the proposal can be stated as follows.
x_(n+1) = F(x_n) (0.1)
Equation (0.1) expresses the familiar low-level discrete update picture: a system evolves from step n to step n + 1 by an update rule F. For a decoder-only LLM, this is a sensible micro-description. Yet the core claim of this article is that, for higher-order AI cognition, the index n is often not the natural semantic clock. A more natural description is:
S_(k+1) = G(S_k, Π_k, Ω_k) (0.2)
Here, k indexes not micro-steps but completed coordination episodes. S_k is the system’s semantic state before episode k, Π_k is the activated coordination program or locally assembled reasoning structure during that episode, and Ω_k denotes the observations, retrieved materials, tool outputs, memory fragments, and constraints encountered along the way. The article’s thesis is that, for attractor-based intelligence, the episode index k is often a better natural time variable than the token index n.
The scope of this article is therefore fourfold. First, it argues that existing clocks are insufficient for higher-order reasoning analysis. Second, it defines the coordination-episode tick as a natural semantic time variable. Third, it situates this proposal inside an attractor-based view of cognition. Fourth, it prepares the ground for a runtime view of AI reasoning in which local semantic cells are triggered, stabilized, composed, and sometimes trapped.
The rest of the paper develops this claim systematically. Sections 1 and 2 establish why current clocks are inadequate and define the new tick formally. Later sections will show how this tick can be embedded in a hierarchical runtime model, how local semantic cells can be defined, and how convergence, fragility, and failure attractors may be measured in practice. The present sections lay only the conceptual foundation. Their purpose is to make one shift of viewpoint unavoidable: the question is not only how intelligence updates, but in what units meaningful intelligence should be said to advance.
1. Why Existing Time Axes Are Not Enough
Any theory of AI dynamics must choose a time variable. In practice, most existing analyses implicitly choose one of three clocks. The first is token-time, where each generated token or internal autoregressive step counts as one discrete update. The second is wall-clock time, where the system is measured in seconds, milliseconds, or latency intervals. The third is a simple event count, where one may count tool calls, turns, loop iterations, or the appearance of certain features. All three are useful. None should be discarded. Yet none of them is obviously the natural clock for higher-order semantic reasoning.
Token-time is the most obvious starting point because base LLMs are built as token-predictive systems. At the micro-level, the picture is straightforward:
h_(n+1) = T(h_n, x_n) (1.1)
Here, h_n is the hidden state at token step n, x_n is the current token or token context, and T is the model’s update rule. For low-level implementation analysis, this is exact enough. It tracks the real computational progression of the system. It is also the right language for studying local mechanisms such as attention patterns, induction heads, residual stream evolution, and layerwise feature transport.
The problem begins when one attempts to use token-time as the primary time axis for semantic coordination. A high-order reasoning system does not necessarily make meaningful progress once per token. Many tokens may merely elaborate a local frame already formed earlier. A single tool output may completely alter the semantic trajectory despite involving few emitted tokens. A reflective episode may consume many internal steps but function as one bounded semantic attempt. If one insists on using token count as the privileged temporal axis, one risks describing the surface texture of unfolding language while missing the deeper units in which the system actually reorganizes its task state.
The inadequacy of wall-clock time is even clearer. Elapsed seconds are influenced by hardware, batching, scheduling, tool latency, network conditions, and runtime architecture. Two semantically equivalent reasoning episodes may have different durations in seconds. Conversely, two semantically different episodes may happen to consume comparable latency. Wall-clock time is essential for engineering, but it is not usually the natural semantic parameter for cognitive phase analysis.
A simple event count is only a partial improvement. One may count loop iterations, tool calls, branches, retries, or retrieved documents. This is more structured than raw seconds, but it still presupposes that the counted event is the correct semantic boundary. Often it is not. A single reasoning episode may involve several tool calls but still constitute one coherent semantic push. Conversely, a single output turn may conceal multiple internally distinct episodes. The problem is therefore not just “which event do we count?” but whether event-counting has been anchored to the right semantic unit in the first place.
The deeper issue can be expressed in a single sentence: a good time axis must align with the natural granularity of state change. If the true state transitions of interest occur at the level of semantic closure, local conflict resolution, or coordination completion, then any clock defined at a much finer or much coarser scale will distort the geometry of the process. One may still extract useful approximations, but the resulting phase portrait may be blurry, fragmented, or misindexed.
This is particularly important if one wants to think in attractor terms. Attractor analysis depends on how trajectories are sampled. A basin can appear stable or unstable depending on whether one observes the system at the right state-transition intervals. A trajectory that seems noisy in token-space may become clean in episode-space. A process that looks like a single continuous stream at the output level may resolve into several semantically distinct local basins when indexed by meaningful coordination units. The selection of the time axis is therefore not a cosmetic matter. It partly determines what kind of dynamics become visible at all.
This motivates the central critique of existing clocks:
n ≠ natural time for high-order reasoning (1.2)
Equation (1.2) does not deny that n is a real computational index. It only denies that n must be the natural semantic index. The same point can be made about wall-clock time t:
t ≠ natural time for semantic coordination (1.3)
The problem is not that token-time and wall-clock time are false. The problem is that they may be misaligned with the semantic structure one is trying to explain.
To see this more concretely, consider a system asked to answer a difficult True/False question. The final output appears binary and simple. Yet internally, the system may need to retrieve a hidden premise, test an analogy, suppress a tempting but irrelevant frame, resolve a contradiction, consult a tool, and compare two candidate interpretations. These processes may not be neatly synchronized with emitted token boundaries. Some may occur as short bursts, others as extended internal loops. The semantically meaningful unit is not “the 73rd token” or “the next 500 milliseconds.” The meaningful unit is the completion of one bounded semantic sub-process that changes what the system is now capable of asserting or ruling out.
The same is true at larger scales for agentic systems. A planning agent may spend varying amounts of time collecting evidence, revising a local strategy, or negotiating with another module. A multi-agent runtime may progress through asynchronous message cascades in which meaningful global advancement happens only when a coordinated subgoal has actually settled. Fixed clocks can measure the process from the outside, but they do not necessarily express the system’s own natural semantic rhythm.
This leads to a general principle:
A time variable is natural for cognition only if equal increments correspond, at least approximately, to comparable units of semantic advancement. (1.4)
Token-time satisfies this principle for low-level generation, but not reliably for high-level coordination. Wall-clock time satisfies it for external runtime measurement, but not for semantic organization. Simple event counts satisfy it only when the chosen event happens to coincide with a genuine semantic boundary. Therefore, if one wants a dynamical framework for attractor-based reasoning, one must search for a better unit.
That better unit, this article argues, is the coordination episode.

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