A Transformation-Based Framework for Verifiable Computation
Processual Memory Architecture (PMA) is a computational framework that unifies data storage and computation by representing all information as transformation functions rather than static state, rendering the traditional ontological distinction between them architecturally unnecessary.
In PMA, storing information means encoding it as a mathematical transformation that produces the data when applied to a standardized canonical input. Reading means applying the transformation. Computing means composing transformations. This inversion of the conventional von Neumann paradigm ensures that the process of computation is its own provenance record.
Formal Definition
PMA is defined as a system ⟨R, C, ·, O⟩:
Emergent Architectural Properties
The transformation-based design yields five properties that collectively enable verifiable computation:
Applications
PMA provides the theoretical foundation for systems that require verifiable, safe, and transparent decision-making in high-consequence environments — including defense, healthcare, financial services, and autonomous systems governance.
Luminareware's Liora ARIA™ platform is the engineering realization of Processual Memory Architecture, implementing these properties as an operational system with cryptographic commitment, formal reasoning, and Decision Lifecycle Verification.
Diacont, W. D. (2026). Processual Memory Architecture: A Transformation-Based Framework for Verifiable Computation and Safety-by-Construction AGI.
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18643582
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