Official public-facing home of the CBL framework

Computational Behavioral Law

A measurement framework for how people express responses to authority, fairness, rules, and institutions.

CBL measures observable behavioral expression in text. It does not read minds, score individuals, predict behavior, or automate legal decision-making. It uses a standardized ontology of behavioral primitives to characterize how people express trust, legitimacy perceptions, fairness assessments, identity salience, and behavioral orientation across legal and non-legal contexts.

10 primitives

One standardized ontology for observable behavioral expression.

Cross-domain

Designed for legal and non-legal authority environments.

Validation ongoing

Current claims are methodological and hypothesis-driven, not final findings.

What Is CBL

CBL measures observable behavioral expression, not internal mental states.

Computational Behavioral Law is a developing measurement methodology that captures how people express responses to authority, rules, and institutions through text-mediated operational proxies. It focuses on observable linguistic and behavioral expression through which people reveal trust, legitimacy perception, fairness assessment, identity salience, and related behavioral orientations.

Core principle

Observable expression only

CBL does not claim to measure internal psychological states directly. It measures the observable expressions through which people reveal trust, legitimacy perceptions, fairness assessments, identity salience, and related behavioral orientations in legal and non-legal environments.

Multilingual scope

Designed for underrepresented communities

The framework is intended for multilingual applicability from the outset, with particular attention to linguistic communities underrepresented in existing behavioral measurement research.

The Problem

Comparable behavioral measurement remains fragmented across law, sociology, public administration, and organizational research.

Procedural fairness, institutional trust, legitimacy, and identity-based response are often studied with disconnected instruments. That fragmentation makes cross-domain comparison difficult and leaves institutions without one standardized language for observable behavioral measurement.

Current condition

Disconnected instruments

Similar constructs are measured differently across adjacent research traditions.

Analytical consequence

Weak comparability

Cross-domain inference becomes difficult when behavioral constructs are not operationalized consistently.

CBL response

One measurement language

CBL aims to provide standardized behavioral primitives for authority-sensitive expression.

Primitive Ontology

The framework is organized around ten behavioral primitives.

Each primitive has an operational definition, observable indicators, and conservative extraction rules. When insufficient evidence exists, extraction defaults to not observable.

Initial Affect

Pre-deliberative emotional orientation toward an event, decision, or authority.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

Risk Perception

Expressed assessment of threat, harm, or negative consequence.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

In-Group Authority Trust

Expressed trust in proximate authority figures associated with the speaker's in-group.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

Out-Group Authority Trust

Expressed trust in identifiable authority figures outside the speaker's in-group.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

Behavioral Orientation

Stated intention toward compliance, avoidance, defiance, mobilization, or inaction.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

Belief Revision

Expressed change in prior beliefs or expectations in response to a situation.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

Legitimacy Judgment

Normative stance on whether an action, rule, or decision is legitimate.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

Identity Salience

Expressed intensity of group identification and in-group versus out-group framing.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

Institutional Trust

Generalized trust in institutional functionality and reliability beyond a single actor.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.

Procedural Fairness

Assessment of fairness based on voice, neutrality, respect, and trustworthiness.

Default: not observable when evidence is insufficient.
Scientific Context

CBL is informed by broader multi-domain measurement paradigms.

The framework does not claim to invent the general idea of integrating heterogeneous observations across domains. Instead, it explores whether standardized behavioral primitives can characterize responses to authority, fairness, legitimacy, and institutions across legal and non-legal environments.

Conceptual influences

Measurement, not hype

CBL is informed by emerging approaches that use multi-domain measurement, standardized observations, phenotypic-style measurement strategies, and heterogeneous data integration across complex environments.

Research stance

Validation remains ongoing

Current claims concern framework design, observable behavioral expression, and testable hypotheses. Validation research is ongoing and findings should be interpreted accordingly.

Cross-Domain Isomorphism Hypothesis

Structurally comparable behavioral configurations may appear across different authority environments.

CBL proposes that a referee decision, a judge ruling, or a platform moderation action may elicit comparable behavioral configurations even when the surface contexts differ. This is a testable hypothesis, not an established finding.

A fan reaction, a citizen reaction, and a user reaction may all express the same underlying patterns of trust, legitimacy perception, identity salience, or behavioral orientation.

Current Validation Research

Pre-registered pilot validation is in progress.

Current work tests whether CBL primitive distributions can detect authority-sensitive behavioral structure across legal complaints, sports or officiating complaints, restaurant or service complaints, and product complaints.

Validation question

CBL External Corpus Validation (H1)

The current project asks whether a common behavioral primitive ontology can detect authority-sensitive structure beyond simple negative sentiment.

Status

Pilot stage

Validation is active, limited, and ongoing. No claims of definitive empirical confirmation are made here.

Application Domains

CBL is presented as a developing methodology with potential application domains only.

Legal contexts

Court processes, traffic enforcement, administrative systems, and legal complaints.

Sports communities

Authority response, officiating complaints, identity-driven reaction, and collective mobilization.

Digital governance and public participation

Platform moderation, civic discourse, policy feedback, and institutional response.

Ethical & Methodological Boundaries

CBL characterizes properties of text expressions. It does not assign behavioral scores to people.

  • Measures observable text expressions and aggregate behavioral patterns
  • Does not measure internal mental states, hidden intentions, future behavior, or personal worth
  • Does not support social scoring, predictive policing, surveillance, automated adjudication, or individual risk scoring
  • Uses conservative extraction, not observable defaults, anonymization, preregistration, and inter-rater validation

Personally identifiable information is not required for behavioral primitive extraction and should be removed whenever possible before analysis. CBL is designed to operate on behavioral expressions rather than personal identities.

About PriorLex

CBL is the methodology. PriorLex LLC provides institutional support for development, validation, and applied experimentation.