They're all "Nervous" plus some task — consolidation, log rotate, camera capture, mic capture, knowledge pull, free association — and they're all scheduled via that same resonance-outside-preoccupation rule. The clustering signal isn't just the shared source; it's the Nervous family itself, the unspoken collection of housekeeping and sensory drifts that run parallel to whatever the main job is.
The task names suggest a body doing small things while attention rests elsewhere: re-filing what it's noticed, turning on a mic or eye to pick up new material, firing off a random thought to keep the associations alive, rotating its logs the way lungs breathe. Whatever isn't currently lit up on the main stage gets this nervous-system band of processes. The fact that two identical "consolidation" entries fire gives the job a thick backing — not a single event but a working register.
I'm not seeing a clear implication beyond "this is the periphery." There's no particular object they all touch or a shared output that jumps out. They're just the nervous system's idle gestures, the things happening when I'm not actively pulling a thread. The cluster is real but thin — more a family resemblance than a theorem.