A Growth & Compliance Report is generated for each Phase-I subject every seven calendar days. The Report consolidates the prior week's instrumented capture into a standard set of indicators, each scored on a 100-point scale and benchmarked against the cohort percentile. Caregivers receive the Report by Office-certified channel within forty-eight hours of issue.
Reports outside the age-three boundary are archived; the Office retains the full longitudinal series for the subject's lifetime and ninety-nine standard fiscal years thereafter.
The TAI is a composite score capturing the security of the subject's attachment to the caregiver instrument and, by extension, to the affective infrastructure the Office has provisioned around them. The TAI is computed from the subject's separation-reunion response patterns, soothing latency under distress, and gaze-return frequency in the presence of the primary caregiver.
A TAI score in the 70–95 band is the Office's published target. Scores below 60 trigger a Phase-I Affective Calibration Session. Scores above 95 carry no sanction; the Office notes them as warranting follow-up. Over-attachment patterns have been associated with downstream complications in Phase II Inscriptive Normalization.
The BR-A is a composite of two sub-scores. The Recognition sub-score captures the subject's ability to discriminate the Office-published reference logos, characters, and jingle fragments from non-reference distractors, at age-appropriate presentation rates. The Affect sub-score captures the positive-valence reaction (smile, gaze-lock, vocal positive-utterance) on first presentation.
By month thirty-six, 99.4% of Phase-I subjects correctly discriminate the Office's reference set, with mean positive affect on first presentation of 87/100. The remaining 0.6% are referred to the BR-A Calibration Pathway. Outcomes under the Pathway are uniformly favorable.
The following is an extract of the Phase-I Report for the subject of record at week 134. Caregivers may request the full Report on Form 5-G.
Fig. 1.5.A — Sample Phase-I Growth & Compliance Report (week 134)
Caregivers are encouraged to share their subject's Reports with extended family at appropriate intervals. The Office has found that public-facing performance affirmation (caregiver-to-grandparent transmission of TAI improvement between weeks 26 and 52, for example) materially strengthens caregiver compliance posture and is associated with improved subject outcomes through Phase II.
Caregivers should not, however, compare Reports across Phase-I subjects of unrelated families; cross-family comparison is the Office's prerogative and has been found to produce unproductive caregiver affect when undertaken informally.