
cef-reference-guide
When operators stay in their own lane—each doing its own function without substituting for or blending with another—the emotional system functions cleanly and efficiently. When one operator tries to …
Composition of Active Experiences and Function
The Core Emotion Framework (CEF) defines ten core operators that describe how the human system processes, organizes, and transforms emotional information. While each operator can be understood …
Modulation: Guide clients in conscious activation and deactivation of operators, employing meditation, boundary-setting, and feedback techniques.
ontology-page
the ten CEF operators the three centers (Head, Heart, Gut) polarity values (Positive / Negative / Neutral) Gut mode values (On / Off) all semantic relationships between them This ontology is intended for …
The architecture of the CEF is built upon ten core emotions, referred to as operators or "emotional powers".1 These operators are universal, regardless of cultural background or personality type, and …
Core Emotion The minimal, architecture-level emotional state defined by the 10 operators and 3 centers.
8. Practitioner Errors to Avoid forcing transitions skipping operators blending operators collapsing into narrative confusing transitions with coping strategies treating transitions as emotional “skills” …
Activation: O(c,p) may be binary (active/inactive) or scalar (continuous activation level). Transition: Operators support transitions between processes within and across centers, subject to directionality …
Whereas TS-1 establishes operator mechanics, TS-2 defines validation logic, TS-3 specifies computational structures, TS-4 defines simulation protocols, TS-5 governs interoperability, TS-6 …
1.1 Why Facets Matter Operators are the emotional “powers.” Facets are the internal gears. Facet-level clarity enables practitioners to: