arXiv:2604.13102v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Enterprise software organizations face an escalating challenge in maintaining the integrity, security, and freshness of codebases that span hundreds of repositories, multiple programming languages, and thousands of interdependent packages. Existing approaches to codebase maintenance — including static analysis, software composition analysis (SCA), and dependency management tools — operate in isolation, address only narrow subsets of maintenance concerns, and require substantial manual intervention to propagate changes across interconnected systems. We present the Continuous Code Calibration Engine (CCCE), an event-driven, AI-agentic system that autonomously maintains enterprise codebases throughout the Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC). The CCCE introduces three key technical innovations: (1) a dynamic knowledge graph with bidirectional traversal algorithms that simultaneously compute forward impact propagation and backward test adequacy analysis; (2) an adaptive multi-stage gating framework that classifies calibration actions into four risk tiers using learned risk-confidence scoring rather than static rules; and (3) a multi-model continuous learning architecture operating at multiple temporal scales to refine calibration strategies, risk models, and organizational policies from operational feedback. We formalize the system’s graph model, traversal algorithms, and decision logic, and demonstrate through three representative enterprise scenarios that the CCCE reduces mean time to remediation by enabling coordinated, cross-repository calibrations with human-in-the-loop (HITL) oversight where appropriate. The system generates atomic, semantically verified patches with progressive validation and intelligent rollback capabilities, providing end-to-end traceability from triggering events through calibration execution and outcome learning.
Measuring and reducing surgical staff stress in a realistic operating room setting using EDA monitoring and smart hearing protection
BackgroundStress is a critical factor in the operating room (OR) and affects both the performance and well-being of surgical staff. Measuring and mitigating this stress

