Signal Alignment Across Systems defines the minimum structural conditionrequired for coordinated behavior to emerge across multiple internal systems.This monograph examines how independent systems achieve temporarycompatibility in timing, directional output, and activation thresholds, enabling theirsignals to coexist without interference. The analysis outlines the core mechanisms that produce alignment, includingtemporal convergence, directional compatibility, and threshold matching. Itfurther explores how alignment is maintained through continuous microadjustmentsand how it degrades under conditions such as temporalmisalignment, signal conflict, and dominance imbalance. Rather than describing individual system behavior, this monograph focuses on theinteraction dynamics that allow multiple systems to operate in coordination. Signalalignment is positioned as the entry point into integration, where independentactivity transitions into unified behavioral output without requiring system fusion.
Kanna Amresh (Mon,) studied this question.