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Documentation Index

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Tokens in Neuro are structured digital instruments tied to ownership, contracts, and auditable events. They are not only records of scarcity or display objects in a wallet. In the platform material, Neuro-Features are described as digital instruments that can represent NFTs, asset-backed tokens, ownership interests, leases, rights, and other tokenized assets. These tokens are linked to smart contracts, lifecycle rules, and unique ownership.

Why tokens exist in the platform

Many real-world assets, rights, and agreements are hard to manage with ordinary application objects alone. A tokenized model makes it easier to represent:
  • Ownership
  • Transfer
  • Lifecycle
  • Linked payments
  • Rights and entitlements
  • Auditable value exchange
That is why tokens are part of the broader Neuro platform and not just a standalone feature. They connect naturally with identity, contracts, and ledger-backed traceability.

What tokens can represent

The platform material describes Neuro tokens as being able to represent:
  • Non-fungible assets
  • Asset-backed instruments
  • Ownership in projects or physical assets
  • Transferable rights
  • Service or access entitlements
  • Digital and cyber-physical assets
This makes them useful for more than collectibles. The model is intended for operational and business use cases where ownership and transfer must be provable and auditable.

How tokens fit into the platform

  • Legal identities identify owners and other parties
  • Smart contracts define creation, transfer, rules, and lifecycle
  • Neuro-Ledger records important token-related events
  • Payments can be linked to token transfer and contract rules
This is what makes the token model more powerful than a simple database record or a static wallet entry. Tokens are part of a broader trust and automation model.

Why lifecycle matters

Tokens in Neuro are not just “minted and left there forever.” They can be part of a lifecycle with rules, transitions, transfers, and connected business logic. That makes them better suited for real systems where assets, rights, and obligations change over time.

Real-world applications

Published work applying the Neuro token model shows how this plays out in practice:
  • Tokenization of sustainable real estate — Real estate projects in smart cities can be tokenized to represent fractional ownership, with ESG metrics, transfer history, and ownership records all tied to auditable ledger entries and smart contract rules.
  • Asset-backed instruments — Physical or financial assets can be represented as Neuro-Features, making ownership provable and transferable without relying on a central registry.
  • Rights and entitlements — Access rights, service entitlements, and licenses can be managed as tokens with lifecycle rules, expiry, and traceable transfer history.

Key takeaways

A Neuro token is a platform object tied to:
  • Ownership
  • Agreements
  • Signed actions
  • History
  • Business rules
When you work with tokens, you are usually also working with contracts, identities, and auditability.
A token in Neuro is a digital instrument tied to ownership, agreements, and traceable events.

Further reading

Neuro-Foundation

Platform specification and standards

TAG Documentation

Neuron and associated technologies

TAG Community

Tutorials and implementation guides