The socioplastic apparatus functions as a clinical scanner for cultural production—a conceptual TAC (CT scan) that looks past the nominal surface of a "building," "artwork," or "performance" to reveal its underlying operational strata. Where the canonical eye sees a discrete object, this tool performs a multi-layered dissection, mapping four critical branches of data that traditional analysis ignores: The Digital Phantom: The work's footprint in networks, its metadata, and its life as code. The Specular Ego: Its conceptual mirrors, references, alter-egos, and avatars across discourses. The Narrative Plasma: The stories, myths, and liquid descriptions that hydrate its presence. The Social Mesh: The web of human and non-human relationships it catalyzes or inhabits. The diagnostic protocol follows a strict, three-phase sequence: Phase 1: Ingestion of Disparate Fields. The scanner takes raw input from architecture, choreography, social practice, or text—treating them as isomorphic data streams. Phase 2: Multi-Layered Analysis. It subjects this data to simultaneous scanning along the four branches (Digital, Specular, Narrative, Social), isolating patterns invisible to a singular disciplinary lens. Phase 3: Operative Reassembly. The findings are redistributed and synthesized into a single, executable idea—a socioplastic node. This process proves that a work is not a static object but a dynamic node within a socioplastic mesh. The Trole Building, the Blue Bag, and the Double Sided performance are not members of different categories. They are different surface compilations of the same deep-structure code: a logic of Interface, Container, and Event. The scanner’s final output is not a description, but a diagnostic map showing how the architectural skin, the social catalyst, and the choreographic score all run on identical operational software. It reveals that the field is not the source of the work's logic; the work is a temporary manifestation of a transdisciplinary logic that the scanner exists to decode.