What the study found
The document defines working terms for the UNET alignment publication stack, including Be, Source, Do, Face, Trace, Operative Registration, and Source–Expression Correspondence.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors say it should be consulted alongside either of the main papers when a term needs precision. They also note that readers new to the project should begin with the Bridge Preprint.
What the researchers tested
This is a term reference for the UNET alignment publication stack, rather than a report of an experimental test. It serves as a reference across the Bridge and Ontology documents.
What worked and what didn't
The abstract states that the lexicon defines the listed terms and related terms used across the project documents. It does not report comparative results or indicate terms or approaches that did not work.
What to keep in mind
The available summary does not describe limitations beyond its scope as a terminology reference. It is described as part of a three-paper stack, and the abstract directs new readers to start with the Bridge Preprint.
Key points
- The document defines working terms for the UNET alignment publication stack.
- It includes terms such as Be, Source, Do, Face, Trace, Operative Registration, and Source–Expression Correspondence.
- The authors say it should be used with the main papers when precise term use is needed.
- The abstract identifies it as part of a three-paper stack and points new readers to the Bridge Preprint.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- UNET Lexicon v2.1 defines terms for the alignment publication stack
- Authors:
- Armando Soto
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-26
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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