Evaluation Architecture

Objective Quality System.

OQS — Objective Quality System is the structured evaluation architecture inside the Axiometric Systems stack. It supports objective review, measurable output assessment, and consistent evaluation behavior where informal review is not sufficient.

What OQS Does

Applies structured evaluation logic to produce consistent, repeatable output assessment.

OQS organizes evaluation into defined criteria, repeatable conditions, and controlled assessment pathways. It exists to reduce inconsistency, scoring looseness, and interpretation drift.

What It Solves

Reduces unstable output review.

Where outputs need to be judged consistently, informal review is not sufficient. OQS provides a stronger basis for review so results can be repeated, compared, and governed.

Customer Relevance

What OQS can do for the customer.

Measure

Evaluate outputs under defined criteria.

Assess output quality using structured review categories instead of informal scoring or shifting expectations.

Stabilize

Reduce scoring drift.

Create more consistent evaluation behavior across repeated use, different reviewers, or different operating conditions.

Support

Improve decision confidence.

Provide a stronger basis for deciding whether outputs should move forward, be revised, or be rejected.

Where It Fits

Evaluation before governance.

OQS sits between raw output generation and final governance enforcement. It helps determine what quality is present before a governance layer decides what can pass.

What Customers Receive
  • Structured evaluation outcomes
  • Repeatable category-based review
  • More stable comparison across outputs
  • Evaluation input for downstream control layers
System Relationship

OQS inside the stack.

Input

Generated or submitted material

Content enters the review boundary for evaluation.

OQS

Objective review architecture

Outputs are assessed under structured logic designed to reduce looseness and instability.

SAFE-T

Governance and pass/fail control

Outputs are allowed forward, revised, flagged, or rejected under protocol rules.