Self-Regulating, Knowledge-Driven Distributed Software Systems: Mindful Machines

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Abstract

Large language models and agentic AI frameworks achieve strong performance but remain limited by statistical reasoning, shallow memory, and the absence of intrinsic self-regulation. These limitations restrict transparency, resilience, and adaptability in real-world distributed environments. We introduce Mindful Machines, a post-Turing computational paradigm that integrates self-regulation and meta-cognition into distributed software systems. The proposed Autopoietic and Meta-Cognitive Operating System (AMOS) is guided by a Digital Genome encoding goals, policies, and ethical constraints. AMOS enables autopoietic behaviors—self-deployment, self-healing, and self-scaling—while maintaining semantic and episodic memory in a graph database and leveraging cognizing oracles for validated, transparent reasoning. To demonstrate feasibility, we re-implement the well-known credit-default prediction problem as a distributed application composed of containerized services orchestrated by AMOS across heterogeneous cloud infrastructures. Compared with a conventional monolithic ML pipeline, the prototype exhibits three key improvements: i. resilience through automated fault recovery and elastic scaling; ii. explainability via event-driven history and auditable decision trails; iii. real-time adaptability to behavioral changes without retraining. The results highlight that Mindful Machines provide a scalable architecture for knowledge-centric, ethically aligned, and sustainable AI. By uniting the computer and the computed into a self-regulating whole, this paradigm advances transparent and trustworthy distributed software systems.

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