Coupled Control, Structured Memory, and Verifiable Action in Agentic AI (SCRAT -- Stochastic Control with Retrieval and Auditable Trajectories): A Comparative Perspective from Squirrel Locomotion and Scatter-Hoarding
Maximiliano Armesto, Christophe Kolb

TL;DR
This paper explores how integrating control, memory, and verification in agentic AI can be inspired by squirrel ecology, proposing a hierarchical control model and a benchmark agenda for future research.
Contribution
It introduces a minimal hierarchical control model coupling control, structured memory, and verifiable actions, inspired by squirrel ecology, and proposes a benchmark agenda for AI development.
Findings
Fast local feedback improves robustness under hidden dynamics.
Memory organized for future control enhances delayed retrieval.
Verifiers reduce silent failure and information leakage.
Abstract
Agentic AI is increasingly judged not by fluent output alone but by whether it can act, remember, and verify under partial observability, delay, and strategic observation. Existing research often studies these demands separately: robotics emphasizes control, retrieval systems emphasize memory, and alignment or assurance work emphasizes checking and oversight. This article argues that squirrel ecology offers a sharp comparative case because arboreal locomotion, scatter-hoarding, and audience-sensitive caching couple all three demands in one organism. We synthesize evidence from fox, eastern gray, and, in one field comparison, red squirrels, and impose an explicit inference ladder: empirical observation, minimal computational inference, and AI design conjecture. We introduce a minimal hierarchical partially observed control model with latent dynamics, structured episodic memory,…
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