Our commitments

Values that shape the work before it ships.

For Cytognosis, openness and equity are not a veneer around technology. They determine which questions we ask, what we build, how we evaluate it, and when we choose not to make a claim.

In practice

Public-benefit infrastructure needs public commitments.

These are operating commitments, not promises that every research problem is already solved.

01

Open where it is responsible

Share methods, schemas, evaluation practices, and limitations whenever doing so is safe, lawful, and respectful of participants.

02

Equity is part of validation

Evaluate performance across populations and contexts; publish qualification when evidence is incomplete or performance differs.

03

Consent is a real boundary

Collect only what is needed, make participation understandable, and preserve meaningful choices over sensitive data.

04

Uncertainty belongs in the result

Surface assumptions, confidence bounds, and failure modes rather than letting apparent precision become false authority.

05

Lived context matters

Health research should not flatten people into data. Context, agency, and experience are part of responsible interpretation.

06

Accountability remains human

Our work supports researchers and communities; it does not replace professional judgment or make clinical decisions.

What this means

Technology and values are inseparable.

The same commitments guide our technical design, beginning with the neuropsychiatry proof of concept. They keep the research direction legible, challengeable, and grounded in the people it is meant to serve.

A working standard

Make the work legible.

Explain what is knownState the evidence and the scope of every claim.
Explain what is not knownDocument gaps rather than hiding them in a model or a footnote.
Invite scrutinyBuild in ways for researchers and communities to inspect and improve the work.

Cytognosis is research infrastructure and does not provide medical diagnosis, treatment, or clinical decision-making.