The socio-economic scope is a structured continuant, and the dynamic context is a structured occurrent. The terms continuant and occurrent are explained in Formal_ontology and also in: Goossenaerts, J., Pelletier, C., September 2002. Ontological commitment for participative simulation. In: Arisawa, H., Kambayashi, Y., Kumar, V., Mayr, H. C., Hunt, I. (Eds.), Conceptual Modeling for New Information Systems Technologies. Vol. 2465 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Berlin, Heidelberg, Ch. 11, pp. 127–140. URL http://www.springerlink.com/content/p9hgu70xmpeqaw47/
Because interactions are defined or described as patterns, their realization will require the involvement of entities or continuants: pattern ''parameters'' are bound to entities in the so-called real site work system (see the figure at Regulative Cycle), and bind:
- roles to macro or meso-level actors (stakeholders) in a country, a province or municipality, or to pico, micro or meso-level actors (stakeholders) in a sector;
- resources to resources (entities) accessible to the actors (stakeholders), for instance information available in the languages mastered by them (language options in the entity dictionary). Note that existing resource gaps for many stakeholders may make problematic the achievement of the intended interaction ''outcome'', or it may distort the cost-benefit equation.
Moreover, interactions can be bound together in variable ways, to create variants and achieve fit of the interaction to the situation, as indicated in the occurrent binding options. The Multisystemic therapy's First Principle (Finding the Fit) and the supporting distinction between the treatment model and the evidence-based treatment clarifies the utility of the variant creation.
Generalization is used with the meaning explained in Generalizations (Geometric) (Wikipedia).