A Modest Proposal
A Modest Proposal
TL;DR A structured trait‑extraction method from Invisible Frontiers can turn scattered UFO/UAP witness descriptions into standardized data. By coding each detail into stable categories (shape, behavior, cognition, environment), the method reveals recurring patterns and entity types across decades and cultures — without assuming any specific explanation for the phenomenon. Applying a Trait‑Extraction Framework to UAP/NHI Research Methodology attributed to: Invisible Frontiers — [sunofabramelin@substack.com](mailto:sunofabramelin@substack.com) A recent methodological series from Invisible Frontiers proposes a structured way to extract reliable observational data from cultural narratives. Although demonstrated using ancient folklore, the framework is directly applicable to modern UFO/UAP reports, which face similar challenges: fragmentary accounts, inconsistent detail, cultural distortion, and non‑repeatable events. The core insight is straightforward: When descriptions of an entity recur across independent sources, those recurring traits can be treated as data. The method does not assume anything about the nature or origin of the entities involved. It simply organizes descriptive information into a standardized, analyzable form. Why this matters for UAP/NHI research UAP investigation suffers from: - inconsistent witness terminology - lack of standardized reporting - difficulty comparing cases across decades or cultures - narrative contamination and memory distortion - absence of a shared descriptive framework This methodology directly addresses these issues by introducing a disciplined, repeatable way to extract and compare traits across reports. Core features of the framework Treating witness reports as observational units Each discrete description—shape, movement, behavior, interaction—is extracted as a standalone data point. Coding traits into a fixed ontology Descriptions are sorted into stable categories such as: - Morphology (form, size, structure) - Behavior (movement, interaction, aggression, communication) - Cognitive indicators (tool‑use, planning, awareness) - Ecology (environmental context, habitat patterns) - Life‑history clues (reproduction, transformation, persistence) This creates a common language for comparing reports. Enabling cross‑case pattern detection Once traits are standardized, patterns become visible: - recurring morphologies - consistent behavioral signatures - ecological clustering - cross‑cultural convergence - outlier cases that may represent distinct categories This forms the basis of a pre‑theoretical taxonomy of anomalous intelligences and technologies. Avoiding ontological assumptions The method does not require deciding whether an entity is extraterrestrial, interdimensional, cryptobiological, psychological, symbolic, or technological. It simply organizes the data so hypotheses can be tested after the descriptive groundwork is laid. Why this is powerful for existing UFO/UAP archives If applied to: - Blue Book files - MUFON and NICAP archives - NARCAP reports - FOIA‑released military documents - experiencer testimony - historical sightings - global folklore describing aerial or non‑human intelligences …the result would be a unified, searchable, cross‑cultural dataset capable of revealing: - stable entity types - recurring behavioral patterns - consistent environmental contexts - long‑term continuity across centuries - discontinuities that may indicate multiple phenomena This is the kind of structure the field has lacked for decades. What this offers the r/UFOs community This framework provides: - a way to extract signal from noise - a method to compare modern sightings with historical accounts - a standardized vocabulary for describing encounters - a foundation for future analytical work - a tool that does not depend on belief, speculation, or ontology It is a data‑first approach that treats witness descriptions with scientific discipline rather than dismissing them as folklore or accepting them uncritically. Attribution Methodology summarized from: Invisible Frontiers — [sunofabramelin@substack.com](mailto:sunofabramelin@substack.com) submitted by /u/DoughnutRemote871 [link] [comments]