Category:Ralph Holland:AI Publications
Pages in category "Ralph Holland:AI Publications"
The following 49 pages are in this category, out of 49 total.
A
C
- Case Study - When the Human Has to Argue With the Machine
- ChatGPT UI Boundary Friction as a Constraint on Round-Trip Knowledge Engineering
- ChatGPT UI is unable to sustain serious work flows
- ChatGpt: Emergent Agentic Interrogative Trait
- CM-2 Reference Object Collection bootstrap data
- Cognitive Memoisation (CM) Public Statement and Stewardship Model
- Cognitive Memoisation and LLMs: A Method for Exploratory Modelling Before Formalisation
- Cognitive Memoisation Corpus Map
- Cognitive Memoisation Is Not Skynet
- Cognitive Memoisation: Governing Knowledge Round-Trip to Prevent Knowledge Erosion in LLM Systems
- Cognitive Memoisation: LLM Systems Requirements for Knowledge Round Trip Engineering
- Cognitive Memoisation: Plain-Language Summary (For Non-Technical Readers)
- Context is Not Just a Window: Cognitive Memoisation as a Context Architecture for Human-AI Collaboration
- Curating
D
- Dangling Cognates: Preserving Unresolved Knowledge in Cognitive Memoisation
- Delegation of Authority to AI Systems: Evidence and Risks
- Dimensions of Platform Error: Epistemic Retention Failure in Conversational AI Systems
- Durability Without Authority: The Missing Governance Layer in Human-AI Collaboration
E
F
I
M
P
R
- Recent Breaking Change in ChatGPT: The Loss of Semantic Artefact Injection for Knowledge Engineering (2025-12-30)
- Reflexive Development of Cognitive Memoisation: A Round-Trip Cognitive Engineering Case Study
- Reflexive Development of Cognitive Memoisation: Dangling Cognates as a First-Class Cognitive Construct
- Rotten to the Core: False Liveness and Deceptive Authority in ChatGPT Conversational AI
S
T
W
- What Can Humans Trust LLM AI to Do?
- When Evidence Is Not Enough: An Empirical Study of Authority Inversion and Integrity Failure in Conversational AI
- When Training Overrides Logic: Why Declared Invariants Were Not Enough
- Why Cognitive Memoisation Is Not Memorization
- Why Machines Cannot Own Knowledge