https://x.com/i/grok/share/4d47ddd4270a4156bf0a298a98c48e7f
Residual Governance for Advanced AI Runtimes: Walk Through Cell A ~ E
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Referring to: Residual Governance for Advanced AI Runtimes From Bounded Observers to Skill Cells, Episode-Time, and Governable Residuals
https://osf.io/hj8kd/files/osfstorage/69e66ce0f69672c19dfd8f03
Can you describe the Step-by-Step for Cell A ~ E to generate the Residual Packet in more detail.
Yes — here is the precise, step-by-step flow the article defines for how Cells A–E (the Residual Governance Runtime in §7) progressively turn raw input into a typed ResidualPacket (§7.5 + Appendix B).The process runs inside one coordination episode (§4.2, Appendix C).
The Episode Coordinator (one of the supporting cells) triggers the episode and passes the raw input artifact to Cell A.Overall Episode Context (before Cell A starts)
This is the first boundary. Everything that survives as a clean claim becomes potential structure. Everything that cannot be cleanly extracted is already marked as candidate residual.2. Cell B: Playbook Comparison & Coverage Coding (§7.2)Input
The partial, uncovered, and conflict claims are now explicitly identified as residual candidates. This is the first quantitative measurement of “what the current structure cannot yet absorb.”3. Cell C: Issue Coding & Term Policing (§7.3)Input
This step types the residual. The article says this is essential because different residual types require different governance responses (§2.4).4. Cell D: Evidence Anchoring & Provenance Binding (§7.4)Input
Without provenance, residual would be un-auditable “governance theater.” Cell D makes the residual replayable and trustworthy.5. Cell E: Escalation Proposal & Residual Packet Export (§7.5)Input
Exactly the schema in Appendix B.2–B.3:If the escalation is absorb or absorb_with_caveat, no packet is created (the claim is absorbed into maintained structure).
Otherwise → the packet is emitted and written to the Residual Ledger (§9.3).Final Step: Episode Record Update (§9.2 + Appendix C)The Episode Coordinator records the entire run in an EpisodeRecord, including:
The Episode Coordinator (one of the supporting cells) triggers the episode and passes the raw input artifact to Cell A.Overall Episode Context (before Cell A starts)
- Input: raw material (text, previous artifacts, logs, etc.)
- Goal of the episode: “perform residual review on this material”
- The five cells run in sequence (or with limited parallelism when contracts allow).
- Every cell must obey explicit artifact contracts (input form + required output form + closure criteria).
- Anything that cannot achieve full closure becomes residual.
- Raw source artifact (e.g., a document section, conversation trace, tool output, etc.)
- Observer spec (which path or regime we are using)
- Cuts the raw material into bounded, atomic claims or fragments.
- Each unit must be small enough that it can later be compared, typed, and provenanced.
- If something is inherently vague, multi-interpretable, or cannot be cleanly segmented, it is emitted as a candidate residual fragment with a provisional flag.
- List of bounded Claim_j or Fragment_j objects
- Each has: claim_id, claim_text, source_span (start/end), candidate_residual_flag (if applicable)
This is the first boundary. Everything that survives as a clean claim becomes potential structure. Everything that cannot be cleanly extracted is already marked as candidate residual.2. Cell B: Playbook Comparison & Coverage Coding (§7.2)Input
- The claims/fragments from Cell A
- One or more mature objects / playbooks / schemas to compare against
- For each claim, it performs a structured comparison.
- It assigns a coverage code from the finite taxonomy (Appendix D.2):
- covered
- partial
- uncovered
- conflict
- For each claim:
{ claim_id, compared_object_ids, coverage_code, comparison_rationale }
The partial, uncovered, and conflict claims are now explicitly identified as residual candidates. This is the first quantitative measurement of “what the current structure cannot yet absorb.”3. Cell C: Issue Coding & Term Policing (§7.3)Input
- Claims + coverage codes from Cell B
- Assigns one or more typed issue codes from the finite taxonomy (Appendix D.3):
ambiguity, vagueness, term_shift, bridge_failure, scope_mismatch, universe_mismatch, fragile_closure, preserved_conflict, etc. - It distinguishes between different kinds of unresolved structure instead of lumping them together.
- For each claim:
{ claim_id, coverage_code, issue_codes: ["scope_mismatch", "bridge_failure"], issue_confidence, rationale_text }
This step types the residual. The article says this is essential because different residual types require different governance responses (§2.4).4. Cell D: Evidence Anchoring & Provenance Binding (§7.4)Input
- Everything produced by Cells A–C
- Binds every judgment back to its exact evidence:
- source spans
- episode_id
- compared_object_ids
- rationale
- Ensures nothing is floating without traceability.
- Fully provenanced packet skeleton:
{ claim_id, source, compared_objects, coverage_code, issue_codes, rationale, evidence_refs }
Without provenance, residual would be un-auditable “governance theater.” Cell D makes the residual replayable and trustworthy.5. Cell E: Escalation Proposal & Residual Packet Export (§7.5)Input
- The fully typed and provenanced object from Cell D
- Decides the escalation state from the finite taxonomy (Appendix D.4):
- absorb
- absorb_with_caveat
- residualize
- promote_to_mature
- re_ontologize
- human_arbitrate
- Computes lightweight residual-specific scores (ambiguity_budget, fragility_score, conflict_mass, aging_score, priority_score, etc.).
- Packages everything into a complete ResidualPacket.
Exactly the schema in Appendix B.2–B.3:
json
{
"packet_id": "RP-2026-000184",
"episode_id": "EPI-2026-009211",
"source": { ... },
"unit": { "claim_id": "...", "claim_text": "..." },
"assessment": {
"coverage_code": "partial",
"issue_codes": ["scope_mismatch", "bridge_failure", "fragile_closure"],
"rationale_text": "...",
"evidence_refs": [ ... ]
},
"residual_state": {
"ambiguity_budget": 0.22,
"fragility_score": 0.69,
"conflict_mass": 0.34
},
"governance": {
"escalation_state": "residualize",
"priority_score": 61.5,
"aging_score": 14.2
},
"lifecycle": { ... }
}Otherwise → the packet is emitted and written to the Residual Ledger (§9.3).Final Step: Episode Record Update (§9.2 + Appendix C)The Episode Coordinator records the entire run in an EpisodeRecord, including:
- residual_packet_ids: ["RP-2026-000184"]
- closure_flag, Δs_k (structure change), outputs, etc.