Object-Bound Agentic Interfaces Receiver-First Spatial Inventories for Post-Smartphone Computing

Canonical definition

Object-Bound Agentic Interfaces (OBAI) define a spatial computing framework in which physical objects act as persistent interface anchors that activate object-specific inventories containing app shortcuts, chromatic state signals, and agent-generated outputs, with generation occurring only after object-based reception.

Abstract

OBAI introduces a post-smartphone interface paradigm in which interaction is no longer initiated through abstract containers, but through real-world objects that function as receiver nodes.

Each object activates a spatially bound inventory that integrates:
• app-level utilities
• chromatic state signals
• contextual actions
• agent-generated outputs

Generation is not immediate.
It is triggered only after object-based reception and contextual grounding.

This establishes a receiver-first interaction model in which AI outputs are not globally emitted, but spatially placed into object-specific contexts.

OBAI resolves the structural gap between agentic intelligence and environmental coherence by introducing the object as a persistent, living interface container.

Core claim

When interaction detaches from environment, output becomes unstable.

When objects become receivers, output becomes coherent.

This shift is not optional.
It is structural.

Main principle

OBAI-1 — Receiver-First Principle

All AI interaction is initiated through object-based reception before generation occurs.

The object:
• defines context
• stabilizes relevance
• determines output location

Generation follows presence.

Interaction model

Minimal loop:

scan → reveal → select → generate → land → fade

Expanded:
1. object is observed or scanned
2. spatial inventory is revealed
3. user selects or inspects context
4. AI generates context-specific output
5. output is placed into the object inventory
6. state fades over time

Interaction becomes environmental rather than interface-driven.

Architecture

1. Object Layer — Receiver Layer

Physical objects function as:
• entry points
• contextual anchors
• identity surfaces

Examples:
• PlayStation → gaming context
• refrigerator → consumption/logistics
• plant → temporal care cycles
• bag → movement/preparation

The object defines the semantic boundary.

2. Spatial Inventory Layer

Each object activates a persistent inventory containing:
• app shortcuts
• chromatic state markers
• contextual actions
• agent-generated outputs

This layer is:
• spatially anchored
• persistent
• dynamically evolving

State exists in place, not in menus.

3. Agentic Layer

Agents operate as:
• detectors (events, changes)
• interpreters (context relevance)
• producers (outputs, actions)

Agents do not output globally.
They land outputs into object-specific inventories.

Chromatic vs symbolic interaction

Symbolic interaction
• detached from environment
• high entropy
• context-fragile
• notification-driven

Object-bound interaction
• environment-anchored
• low entropy
• context-stable
• presence-driven

OBAI replaces navigation with emergence.

Receiver-first inversion

Traditional model:

input → generate → display

Object-bound model:

object → receive → contextualize → generate → land

The object is not the destination of output.
It is the condition for output.

System properties

OBAI systems exhibit:
• situated intelligence
• persistent contextual memory
• chromatic low-symbolic signaling
• distributed environmental interfaces
• non-intrusive output delivery

Output becomes placement.

Relation to prior art

Existing systems provide partial components:
• AR object recognition
• spatial UI anchoring
• multimodal AI

None implement:
• persistent object-bound inventories
• unified app + agent layers
• autonomous output landing
• receiver-first generation logic

OBAI is therefore not an extension.
It is a structural integration.

Conceptual shift

From:
• app-centric computing
• feed-based interaction
• notification systems
• chat-based AI

To:
• object-centric computing
• environment-bound interaction
• ambient state signaling
• agentic contextual landing

Interface dissolves into environment.

Example

Object: PlayStation

Inventory contains:
• game shortcuts
• friend presence indicators
• agent-generated recommendations
• communication actions
• live chromatic states

Agent detects new game →
lands result into object →
user opens →
generation occurs on demand

No global notification.

Relation to reasoning systems

OBAI defines the interface layer.

It determines:
• where output appears

It does not define:
• how reasoning is performed

Underlying reasoning systems may structure output before landing, but OBAI governs spatial placement and emergence.

Why this matters

As AI becomes:
• agentic
• persistent
• ambient

Output volume increases.

Without environmental anchoring:
• overload increases
• fragmentation increases
• instability increases

OBAI introduces:
• object as anchor
• environment as interface
• presence as filter

AI shifts from producing outputs
to placing meaning.

Thermodynamic law

OBAI-Law

An agentic system becomes environmentally stable when output generation is delayed until object-based reception and spatially resolved through persistent inventories.

Stability emerges through placement, not production.

Key claims
• objects are the primary interface anchors
• generation must follow reception
• output must land in context
• chromatic signaling replaces notifications
• environment becomes the interface layer
• agentic systems require spatial grounding
• presence determines relevance

Minimal model

object
→ receive
→ contextualize
→ generate
→ land
→ fade

One-sentence summary

OBAI defines how physical objects become interface anchors that receive context first, enabling AI to generate and place outputs exactly where they belong.

Keywords

object-bound interface
spatial computing
agentic AI
ambient interface
receiver-first systems
contextual AI
chromatic signaling
spatial inventory
post-smartphone UI
environmental computing

Canonical statement

Object-Bound Agentic Interfaces define the thermodynamic transition in which interaction moves from abstract generation to environment-bound reception, and meaning is placed rather than produced.

Zenodo

Eissens, R. (2026). Object-Bound Agentic Interfaces: Receiver-First Spatial Inventories for Post-Smartphone Computing (1.0). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19500161

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