In this regime, success depends on collective interpretation rather than coordination alone. Agents must align not just actions, but models: how they understand incomplete information, assess risk, and update beliefs over time. Failure arises when shared uncertainty leads to hesitation, divergent interpretations, or mismatched risk tolerance—not because of mistrust, but because agreement on what is happening lags behind agreement on what should be done.


Categories of Joint Sensemaking

Fully Cooperative × Imperfect Information × Symmetric Structure

Fixed structure (held constant):

Uncertainty is the point, not a defect.


1. Exploratory Coordination

(Non-binding commitment)

What it is
Agents collaborate loosely to interpret an uncertain environment, retaining full freedom to revise beliefs and actions.

How it works

Why this is stable
The domain rewards flexibility; premature lock-in would be counterproductive.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“Let’s see what we find and adjust together.”


2. Hypothesis Anchoring

(Unilateral binding)

What it is
One agent commits to a working model or interpretation to give the collaboration direction, while the other remains free to revise.

How it works

Why this is stable
Shared uncertainty benefits from a temporary anchor that focuses exploration.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“Let’s proceed as if this is true — we can revise if needed.”


3. Mutual Model Lock-in

(Bilateral binding)

What it is
Both agents commit to a shared interpretation or plan despite uncertainty, agreeing to act as if it is correct.

How it works

Why this is stable
The situation demands coordinated action even without certainty.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“We don’t know for sure — but we move together on this.”


4. Procedural Sensemaking

(Externally enforced binding)

What it is
Uncertainty is managed through externally imposed procedures that dictate how agents interpret and act.

How it works

Why this is stable
The cost of divergent interpretation exceeds the cost of rigid procedure.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“When we’re unsure, we follow the book.”


Structural takeaway (Joint Sensemaking)

In this regime, commitment governs how uncertainty is handled, not whether cooperation exists.

Commitment expressionWhat stabilizes sensemaking
Exploratory CoordinationFlexibility and open revision
Hypothesis AnchoringDirection without lock-in
Mutual Model Lock-inCoordinated action under uncertainty
Procedural SensemakingRule-based convergence