Human behavioral and functional performance shows variability across physiological, contextual, environmental, and adaptive conditions even where previously demonstrated skills or learned repertoires are present. Observational frameworks often document behavioral outcomes without systematically operationalizing the variability apparent in adaptive accessibility across changing physiological-regulation conditions. This paper presents the state-dependent accessibility coding system (SDACS), an observational framework that is designed to support the ecological repeated-measures documentation of adaptive accessibility across changing physiological and contextual conditions. In the SDACS framework, adaptive accessibility refers to the moment-to-moment availability of adaptive behavioral, communicative, emotional, cognitive, relational, and regulatory capacities that arise naturally from contexts and demands. This framework distinguishes adaptive accessibility from the stable possession of skills, proposing that individuals can possess established repertoires while demonstrating fluctuating accessibility to those repertoires under changing physiological–regulatory and contextual conditions. The SDACS framework includes observational coding procedures that involve physiological load rating, adaptive accessibility rating, contextual and environmental coding variables, regulation-supportive observation procedures, and documentation of a post-support accessibility shift. The system is proposed as exemplifying an exploratory observational methodology rather than being a diagnostic instrument or direct biological measure of physiological processes. This framework is intended to support future repeated-measures observational study that examines the potential relationships among physiological–regulatory load, contextual conditions, adaptive accessibility, and behavioral organization in varied ecological environments. Future empirical investigation is necessary to evaluate the feasibility, reliability, construct validity, and potential study applications of the SDACS framework.
Yoandra M Gomez Uncu (Tue,) studied this question.