SgS-12 forms and CRS-10 provide repeatable practical markers for baseline and trend use.
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.
How to read this page
Clear signal on what modules are stronger today and where caveats still apply.
Avoid drawing fixed trait conclusions from a single run or one difficult day.
Use baseline plus repeat checks on a steady schedule to see direction over time.
Performance and self-regulation tracking only, not diagnosis or treatment.
Everyday summary
Psi-CBS and EDHS are useful practical markers, but should be interpreted with active-validation caveats.
What this means for your decisions
Run a full baseline session before a training phase so you have a valid reference point.
Repeat weekly or fortnightly under similar conditions to keep the signal comparable.
Look for up, stable, down, or noisy patterns across multiple points rather than reacting to one session.
Use outputs to guide training decisions. Do not treat them as clinical or diagnostic labels.
Access G Tracker and run a baseline check
Before your next training block, run a full G Tracker session to set your reference point.