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Main Authors: Vladu, Ionel Cristian, Bizdoaca, Nicu, Pirici, Ionica, Balseanu, Tudor-Adrian, Bondoc, Eduard Nicusor
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12286
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author Vladu, Ionel Cristian
Bizdoaca, Nicu
Pirici, Ionica
Balseanu, Tudor-Adrian
Bondoc, Eduard Nicusor
author_facet Vladu, Ionel Cristian
Bizdoaca, Nicu
Pirici, Ionica
Balseanu, Tudor-Adrian
Bondoc, Eduard Nicusor
contents Modern neuroscience has accumulated extensive evidence on perception, memory, prediction, valuation, and consciousness, yet still lacks an explicit operational architecture capable of integrating these phenomena within a unified computational framework. Existing theories address specific aspects of neural function: predictive coding and active inference emphasize hierarchical inference and prediction error minimization; engram theories explain memory through distributed cell assemblies; neuromodulatory accounts focus on value-dependent regulation of plasticity and behaviour; and global workspace or large-scale network models investigate mechanisms underlying conscious access. Despite their explanatory power, these approaches remain only partially integrated at the architectural level. This work introduces DIME (Detect-Integrate-Mark-Execute), a neural architecture organizing perception, memory, valuation, and conscious access within a common operational cycle. The framework includes four interacting components: engrams, distributed recurrent neural structures supporting multiple activation trajectories; execution threads, spatiotemporal trajectories implementing neural processes; marker systems, neuromodulatory and limbic mechanisms regulating gain, plasticity, and trajectory selection; and hyperengrams, large-scale integrative states associated with operational conscious access. The framework is consistent with empirical evidence from hippocampal indexing, recurrent cortical processing, replay phenomena, large-scale network integration, and neuromodulatory regulation. Formulated at an abstract computational level, DIME may also inform artificial intelligence and robotics by providing an architectural template in which representation, valuation, and temporal sequencing emerge from a unified mechanism. An extended theoretical exposition is available in a companion monograph on Zenodo.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_12286
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The DIME Architecture: A Unified Operational Algorithm for Neural Representation, Dynamics, Control and Integration
Vladu, Ionel Cristian
Bizdoaca, Nicu
Pirici, Ionica
Balseanu, Tudor-Adrian
Bondoc, Eduard Nicusor
Neurons and Cognition
Artificial Intelligence
Modern neuroscience has accumulated extensive evidence on perception, memory, prediction, valuation, and consciousness, yet still lacks an explicit operational architecture capable of integrating these phenomena within a unified computational framework. Existing theories address specific aspects of neural function: predictive coding and active inference emphasize hierarchical inference and prediction error minimization; engram theories explain memory through distributed cell assemblies; neuromodulatory accounts focus on value-dependent regulation of plasticity and behaviour; and global workspace or large-scale network models investigate mechanisms underlying conscious access. Despite their explanatory power, these approaches remain only partially integrated at the architectural level. This work introduces DIME (Detect-Integrate-Mark-Execute), a neural architecture organizing perception, memory, valuation, and conscious access within a common operational cycle. The framework includes four interacting components: engrams, distributed recurrent neural structures supporting multiple activation trajectories; execution threads, spatiotemporal trajectories implementing neural processes; marker systems, neuromodulatory and limbic mechanisms regulating gain, plasticity, and trajectory selection; and hyperengrams, large-scale integrative states associated with operational conscious access. The framework is consistent with empirical evidence from hippocampal indexing, recurrent cortical processing, replay phenomena, large-scale network integration, and neuromodulatory regulation. Formulated at an abstract computational level, DIME may also inform artificial intelligence and robotics by providing an architectural template in which representation, valuation, and temporal sequencing emerge from a unified mechanism. An extended theoretical exposition is available in a companion monograph on Zenodo.
title The DIME Architecture: A Unified Operational Algorithm for Neural Representation, Dynamics, Control and Integration
topic Neurons and Cognition
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12286