G Tracker - Validation

G Tracker validation in plain language

This page explains what parts of the G Tracker battery have stronger evidence, what is still in testing, and how to use results without over-interpreting one score.

Orientation

How to read this page

What this page gives you

Clear signal on what modules are stronger today and where caveats still apply.

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What to avoid

Avoid drawing fixed trait conclusions from a single run or one difficult day.

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Best usage pattern

Use baseline plus repeat checks on a steady schedule to see direction over time.

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Scope boundary

Performance and self-regulation tracking only, not diagnosis or treatment.

Posture summary

Everyday summary

Primary focus Reasoning and resilience

SgS-12 forms and CRS-10 provide repeatable practical markers for baseline and trend use.

SgS-12CRS-10
Important caveat Applied modules still maturing

Psi-CBS and EDHS are useful practical markers, but should be interpreted with active-validation caveats.

Psi-CBSEDHS
Practical guidance

What this means for your decisions

1
Start with baseline context

Run a full baseline session before a training phase so you have a valid reference point.

2
Follow a steady cadence

Repeat weekly or fortnightly under similar conditions to keep the signal comparable.

3
Interpret trends, not one-offs

Look for up, stable, down, or noisy patterns across multiple points rather than reacting to one session.

4
Keep claims in scope

Use outputs to guide training decisions. Do not treat them as clinical or diagnostic labels.

Next step

Access G Tracker and run a baseline check

Before your next training block, run a full G Tracker session to set your reference point.