Some systems train correct reactions.
Others train delay.
Simulation is not defined by how much a system moves, how large the visuals are, or how immersive it appears. It is defined by whether the system delivers motion, timing, and sensory alignment in a way the brain recognizes as real.
The issue is not movement alone. The issue is whether the system delivers correct timing, motion origin, and sensory alignment.
What Most Simulators Get Wrong →If the physics are not in the loop, neither is the driver.
| Criterion | In-the-Loop | Surface-Level / Out-of-the-Loop |
|---|---|---|
| Motion Origin | Driven directly by vehicle physics state | Applied as effect; not derived from state |
| Center-of-Mass Alignment | Motion resolved at the vehicle's true center of mass | Rotation occurs at incorrect point; not CoM-referenced |
| Degrees of Freedom | Independent axes; each resolves separately and correctly | Coupled or blended; axes cannot be independently isolated |
| Yaw Fidelity | Present, continuous, and correctly timed | Absent, delayed, or approximated |
| Vestibular Validity | Physical cues match vehicle event timing | Cues absent, approximated, or delayed |
| Training Outcome | Correct timing and response patterns trained | Delayed, visual-dependent, or incorrect patterns trained |
Simulation must be defined before it can be measured, measured before it can be classified, and classified before its consequences can be understood.
This framework defines how simulation systems can be evaluated based on structure, motion, and training relevance. It is designed for engineers, researchers, and organizations seeking measurable clarity.
SFR is a structured way to evaluate whether a simulation system delivers physically and neurologically valid training.
| System Type | SFR Profile | Training Validity |
|---|---|---|
| True CoM Independent DOF System | High | Valid |
| Stewart Platform / Hexapod | Limited | Partial |
| Seat Mover | Limited | Partial |
| Static Simulator | Low | Invalid |
Classification matters because simulation is not neutral. A system either reinforces correct timing and perception, or it trains deviation from them.
If the system introduces timing gaps between input and sensory response, the driver learns to act on a delayed signal.
Repetition against wrong physical relationships builds responses that do not match the real vehicle.
Training that does not preserve correct structural relationships cannot reliably transfer to real vehicle operation.
Each session in an incorrectly structured system reinforces the misalignment rather than correcting it.
If you train late, you react late.
View ConsequencesSimulation quality affects far more than driver comfort or immersion. It affects training validity, decision timing, engineering interpretation, and neurological outcome.
Simulation is not defined by spectacle.
It is defined by whether it matches reality.
If the timing is wrong, the training is wrong.
Apply the framework to a real system, environment, or use case through a structured review pathway.
For teams, facilities, researchers, and organizations seeking structured classification or review.