Advanced International Journal for Research
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Volume 6 Issue 6
November-December 2025
Indexing Partners
Adaptive Identity and Cultural Resilience: How the CALR Model Redefines Policy and Education
| Author(s) | Harshit Gupta |
|---|---|
| Country | India |
| Abstract | Cultural survival in the age of artificial intelligence depends not only on how societies preserve their languages, but on how flexibly those languages evolve. This paper introduces the Cultural Adaptation and Linguistic Resilience (CALR) model—an applied framework derived from the VerbaTerra Project—which quantifies how linguistic adaptation supports cultural continuity, cognitive integration, and institutional stability. Built upon the Integrated Cultural–Linguistic Heuristic Framework (ICLHF), CALR mathematically formalises the relationship between cultural inputs (ritual formality, trade intensity, symbolism, and hierarchy), linguistic processes (syntax recursion, lexical diversity, semantic flexibility, borrowing), and cognitive integration metrics (Neuro-Linguistic Integration Score, NLIS). These interactions yield composite indicators of social robustness, including the Cultural Resilience Metric (CRM) and Elastic Continuity (E), both of which capture a culture’s ability to maintain identity while adapting to environmental and technological change. Using the vSION engine, a computational simulation platform developed within VerbaTerra, this study models cultural–linguistic evolution across synthetic and empirical datasets, demonstrating that hybrid and multilingual systems exhibit higher resilience and adaptive cognition than monolithic linguistic structures. The results affirm that hybridity—rather than linguistic purity—enhances long-term identity stability. In applied terms, the CALR framework provides an analytical foundation for designing AI systems, education models, and cultural policies that preserve diversity through adaptation rather than isolation. By translating cultural theory into computational terms, this paper situates adaptive identity as both a cognitive phenomenon and a policy imperative in the emerging dialogue between artificial and human intelligence. |
| Field | Sociology > Linguistic / Literature |
| Published In | Volume 6, Issue 5, September-October 2025 |
| Published On | 2025-10-26 |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.63363/aijfr.2025.v06i05.1696 |
| Short DOI | https://doi.org/g9742b |
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