Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kelly Rhys
Format: Recurso digital
Language:
Published: Zenodo 2026
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18141191
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866901262771945472
author Kelly Rhys
author_facet Kelly Rhys
contents <p>Zenodo Description</p> <p> </p> <p>This repository contains the paper Tone Nullspace Invariance: Structural Conditions for Bias-Resistant Admissibility, which develops a formal, pre-epistemic analysis of how tone-derived observables may enter admissibility mechanisms without rendering stylistic variation authoritative.</p> <p> </p> <p>The paper treats admissibility as a jurisdictional gate that operates prior to epistemic evaluation, truth assessment, or normative judgment. Tone is defined strictly as an observable, repeatable measurement trace of communicative delivery, not as affect, intent, meaning, or cultural expression. No psychological, ethical, sociological, or population-level assumptions are introduced.</p> <p> </p> <p>The core contribution is the formulation and proof of Tone Nullspace Invariance. Under minimal regularity conditions, the paper shows that any admissibility predicate that depends on tone must be invariant along a maximal subspace of tone perturbations—the tone nullspace. All stylistic, expressive, or register-based variation that lies within this nullspace is structurally incapable of influencing admissibility outcomes. As a result, bias resistance is achieved architecturally through invariance, rather than through fairness criteria, balancing, or post hoc correction.</p> <p> </p> <p>Key features of the work include:</p> <p> </p> <ul> <li>A strict separation between admissibility and epistemic evaluation</li> <li>A formal definition of tone as a vector-valued observable</li> <li>A proof that admissibility sensitivity to tone is confined to directions orthogonal to an admissibility-invariant kernel</li> <li>Extensions to both continuous and discrete tone representations</li> <li>Explicit boundary conditions excluding normative, cultural, ethical, or psychological interpretation</li> <li>An appendix establishing reflexive self-invariance of the argument’s own presentation</li> </ul> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p>The results are intentionally limited and structural. They do not justify admissibility decisions, evaluate their epistemic merit, or assess social consequences. Instead, they identify a necessary architectural condition under which tone-conditioned admissibility can avoid encoding stylistic bias at all.</p> <p> </p> <p>This artifact is suitable for researchers working on admissibility systems, formal epistemology, philosophy of science, AI governance architectures, and pre-epistemic system design.</p>
format Recurso digital
id zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_18141191
institution Zenodo
language
publishDate 2026
publisher Zenodo
record_format zenodo
spellingShingle Tone Nullspace Invariance: Structural Conditions for Bias-Resistant Admissibility
Kelly Rhys
<p>Zenodo Description</p> <p> </p> <p>This repository contains the paper Tone Nullspace Invariance: Structural Conditions for Bias-Resistant Admissibility, which develops a formal, pre-epistemic analysis of how tone-derived observables may enter admissibility mechanisms without rendering stylistic variation authoritative.</p> <p> </p> <p>The paper treats admissibility as a jurisdictional gate that operates prior to epistemic evaluation, truth assessment, or normative judgment. Tone is defined strictly as an observable, repeatable measurement trace of communicative delivery, not as affect, intent, meaning, or cultural expression. No psychological, ethical, sociological, or population-level assumptions are introduced.</p> <p> </p> <p>The core contribution is the formulation and proof of Tone Nullspace Invariance. Under minimal regularity conditions, the paper shows that any admissibility predicate that depends on tone must be invariant along a maximal subspace of tone perturbations—the tone nullspace. All stylistic, expressive, or register-based variation that lies within this nullspace is structurally incapable of influencing admissibility outcomes. As a result, bias resistance is achieved architecturally through invariance, rather than through fairness criteria, balancing, or post hoc correction.</p> <p> </p> <p>Key features of the work include:</p> <p> </p> <ul> <li>A strict separation between admissibility and epistemic evaluation</li> <li>A formal definition of tone as a vector-valued observable</li> <li>A proof that admissibility sensitivity to tone is confined to directions orthogonal to an admissibility-invariant kernel</li> <li>Extensions to both continuous and discrete tone representations</li> <li>Explicit boundary conditions excluding normative, cultural, ethical, or psychological interpretation</li> <li>An appendix establishing reflexive self-invariance of the argument’s own presentation</li> </ul> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p>The results are intentionally limited and structural. They do not justify admissibility decisions, evaluate their epistemic merit, or assess social consequences. Instead, they identify a necessary architectural condition under which tone-conditioned admissibility can avoid encoding stylistic bias at all.</p> <p> </p> <p>This artifact is suitable for researchers working on admissibility systems, formal epistemology, philosophy of science, AI governance architectures, and pre-epistemic system design.</p>
title Tone Nullspace Invariance: Structural Conditions for Bias-Resistant Admissibility
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18141191