How to read it
Spectral Consult does one unglamorous thing well: it tells you when an answer is real and when it is just noise wearing a number. Three ideas make that work — the floor, the four verdicts, and the route.
Every instrument has a floor — a level of fog below which it cannot tell two answers apart. A finding only counts if it rises above the outermost floor. The floors nest: the operator's floor sits inside the artifact's, which sits inside the whole substrate's. Clear the widest one, or the answer is "cannot resolve."
A few-point gap on a 164-question leaderboard is not a ranking — it sits inside the floor.
Put a decision to more than one lens — say a brand-perception read and an operating-model read — and the result is never just "the average." It is one of four typed verdicts, set by two questions: do the lenses agree, and does the finding clear the floor?
If every instrument is guessing, agreement between them is still guessing.
You don't browse the corpus. You bring a decision; the lens routes it to the few concepts and papers that frame it and to the instrument that measures it — then returns a measurement, or tells you the evidence runs out.
"Should we acquire this brand?" — in plain words.
the concepts, the 2–3 papers, and the runnable instrument that bear on it.
run on your material — or an honest "cannot resolve" where the floor wins.
The think-tank, unbundled into three parts — the lens is ours and published; the thinking and the data are yours:
The knowledge, method, and instruments — open, versioned, kept current in the cloud so your AI always reads the latest.
Ours · publishedThe reasoning that applies the lens to your situation — any AI, your own.
Yours · any modelYour data and the decision you face. It never leaves your side.
Yours · stays with youAsk for as much or as little as you need — the same detail dial as the Spectrometer:
It diagnoses and analyzes; you and your people decide and act. It tells you precisely where you are — not where to go. A structured way to organize a decision, not a verdict machine.