Shimo4228 commited on
Commit
3e90902
·
verified ·
1 Parent(s): 6845b09

Upload graph.jsonld with huggingface_hub

Browse files
Files changed (1) hide show
  1. graph.jsonld +1 -0
graph.jsonld CHANGED
@@ -889,6 +889,7 @@
889
  },
890
  {
891
  "@id": "https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.07778",
 
892
  "@type": ["ExternalReference", "ScholarlyArticle"],
893
  "name": "The Accountability Horizon: An Impossibility Theorem for Governing Human-Agent Collectives",
894
  "description": "External formal corroboration of the attribution gap. Proves an Accountability Incompleteness Theorem: once a human-agent collective's minimum compound autonomy exceeds a computable threshold (the Accountability Horizon) and its interaction graph contains a feedback cycle involving both human and artificial agents, no governance framework can simultaneously satisfy four accountability axioms — Attributability (responsibility requires individual causal contribution), Foreseeability Bound, Non-Vacuity, and Completeness. This converts the non-removability of the attribution gap from a contingent engineering limitation into a mathematical necessity. AAP reaches the same solution space independently and from implementation friction rather than formalism: the theorem shows one must relax Attributability or Foreseeability, and AAP's pre-named gap-bearer is a relaxation of Attributability — a named individual bears the gap without individual causal contribution (role responsibility). The theorem's feedforward exception (no impossibility absent a mixed human-agent feedback cycle) parallels AAP's triage and Phase axis: architectures that avoid the autonomous loop avoid the gap. Recorded as a citation surface only; AAP's ADR judgments and concept definitions are neither derived from nor coupled to this formalism.",
 
889
  },
890
  {
891
  "@id": "https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.07778",
892
+ "sameAs": "https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q140181289",
893
  "@type": ["ExternalReference", "ScholarlyArticle"],
894
  "name": "The Accountability Horizon: An Impossibility Theorem for Governing Human-Agent Collectives",
895
  "description": "External formal corroboration of the attribution gap. Proves an Accountability Incompleteness Theorem: once a human-agent collective's minimum compound autonomy exceeds a computable threshold (the Accountability Horizon) and its interaction graph contains a feedback cycle involving both human and artificial agents, no governance framework can simultaneously satisfy four accountability axioms — Attributability (responsibility requires individual causal contribution), Foreseeability Bound, Non-Vacuity, and Completeness. This converts the non-removability of the attribution gap from a contingent engineering limitation into a mathematical necessity. AAP reaches the same solution space independently and from implementation friction rather than formalism: the theorem shows one must relax Attributability or Foreseeability, and AAP's pre-named gap-bearer is a relaxation of Attributability — a named individual bears the gap without individual causal contribution (role responsibility). The theorem's feedforward exception (no impossibility absent a mixed human-agent feedback cycle) parallels AAP's triage and Phase axis: architectures that avoid the autonomous loop avoid the gap. Recorded as a citation surface only; AAP's ADR judgments and concept definitions are neither derived from nor coupled to this formalism.",