claim
active
claim:an-ordinary-american-house-contains-a-density-of-about-1-decision-per-cubic-foot-thus-about-20-000-possible-mistakes-when-the-house-is-not-generatedAn ordinary American house contains a density of about 1 decision per cubic foot, thus about 20,000 possible mistakes when the house is not generated.
Estimate based on labor hours and physical pieces; used to motivate economic cost analysis.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Questions (1)
question
- Question leading to the cost analysis; the answer is around 20,000 mistakes.
Claims (1)
claim
- Cost estimate illustrating the economic cost of fabricated structures; even a low-cost Indian house could see a tenfold value increase.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- The central density threshold claim derived from the interaction of the four colors.
- Economic calculation extrapolating mistake costs to a whole community.
- Because feedback is needed to shape elements during construction.
- Central feasibility claim of the chapter.
- Interpretation of cross-base transfer asymmetry.
- 168 of 4,096 A/1 features are dead and 292 are ultralow density, leaving 3,636 for analysisfinding0.740Characterizes the live vs dead feature distribution in the main autoencoder run
- Warning that the recursion of centers requires extreme precision.
- Quantified management requirement for implementing living process at scale.