[Coding/GHR-PHR] GHR
[Coding/GHR-PHR] GHR
Aliases
- GHR
- good human representation
- good human representational response
Definition
GHR marks a human representational response that is relatively more integrated or adaptive within the system's decision sequence.
It is not a free clinical judgment, but the result of moving through the sequence without being captured by the criteria that push toward PHR.
Conditions
- First confirm that the response belongs to the human representational domain.
- A strong
GHRcase is a pureHresponse withFQ+,FQo, orFQu, without major cognitive special scores and without scoring-input/special-score/AG or scoring-input/special-score/MOR. - A response with scoring-input/special-score/COP may also end in
GHRas long as it does not carryAG. - Popular responses on Cards III, IV, VII, and IX can also push toward
GHRif no earlierPHRcriterion has already captured the response. - If no
PHRcriterion captures it first, the remaining human representational response ends inGHR.
Cautions
GHRis not assigned just because the response feels socially pleasant.Hby itself does not guaranteeGHR; form quality and special scores still matter.- If aggression, morbid content, poor form, or strong cognitive special scores appear, review scoring-input/gphr/PHR first.
- The decision is always made inside the sequence, not from one loose rule.
Cross References
- [Coding/GHR-PHR] GHR/PHR
- [Coding/GHR-PHR] PHR
- [Coding/Content] H
- [Coding/Determinants] M
- [Coding/Special Score] COP
- [Coding/Popular] P
- [Interpretation/Interpersonal] Human Content
- [Interpretation/Interpersonal] Pure H
Evidence Note
- Detailed source comparisons remain in the internal provenance note.