ResoCore frameworks can be applied across many domains. In medicine and biology, the standard is higher. This page defines what we do, what we do not do, and how any research engagement is kept safe, ethical, and measurable.
Scope statement
In biological and clinical contexts, ResoCore provides a structured interpretive lens focused on timing coherence, coupling behavior, and transition-state stability. The purpose is scientific clarity and hypothesis development, using data already collected in real clinical environments.
What this work is
- Observational: retrospective first, no workflow changes.
- Non-interventional: no treatment guidance, no real-time patient feedback.
- Dataset-respectful: built to operate on signals clinicians already trust.
- Safety-first: scoped questions, defined boundaries, conservative interpretation.
- Collaborative: clinician-led exploration with clear roles and accountability.
What this work is not
- Not a diagnostic system.
- Not a replacement for standards of care.
- Not a treatment recommendation engine.
- Not a risk label applied to individuals.
- Not a public medical claims program.
How research engagements typically start
Medical exploration begins with one measurable question, one dataset, and one narrow scope. The first goal is feasibility and pattern clarity, not prediction.
- Step 1: Define the transition window of interest (sleep onset, arousal, recovery, stage change).
- Step 2: Confirm the available signals (cardiac rhythm, respiratory cycle, state markers).
- Step 3: Run a conservative retrospective review and document patterns.
- Step 4: Decide whether the signal supports further hypothesis-driven work.
Collaboration and access
ResoCore supports limited, purpose-scoped clinical collaboration on a pro bono basis when appropriate. Any work involving clinical datasets is expected to remain de-identified and institution-led, under the applicable ethics and privacy standards of the participating organization.
Please include the dataset type, the transition or behavior of interest, and your preferred research scope.