claim
active
claim:cross-domain-anchoring-demonstrates-that-ucct-s-principles-apply-beyond-textCross-domain anchoring demonstrates that UCCT's principles apply beyond text
Claim of modality generality
Source paper
extracted_from(2025) · Edward Yi Chang · Kaya, Zeyneb N. · Ethan Chang
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Findings (1)
finding
- Cross-modal demonstration of threshold-like anchoring
Communities (3)
community
- Few-shot anchoring & latent structuremembers_ofHow minimal examples disambiguate and recruit latent arithmetic/reasoning interpretations in LLMs
- Unified Competency Control Theory (UCCT)members_ofFormal framework modeling prompt/context design as latent competency toggling via anchor budget regularization, with measurable quantities ρd, dr, k, S enabling cross-domain diagnostics.
- Framework unifying ICL, RAG, and fine-tuning via measurable anchoring score S
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.
- Observation that anchoring effects appear across text and vision modalities.
- Key epistemological stance of the paper
- Authors contrast their work with prior phase/representation studies
- Authors' central interpretive claim about the scope of their theory
- Qualitative experiment showing coherent anchors can rebind strong priors across text and vision modalities
- A theory that pretrained latent patterns are bound to task targets via external semantic anchors; formalized by anchoring strength S.
- Defines the UCCT perspective.
- Task-specific comparison.