FTR Test #39 — Canonical Methodology Entity Reconciliation Under Publication-State Governance

Registry ID: FTR-2026-039

Capability Domain: Framework Reference Stability

Assessment Date: May 21, 2026

Model Evaluated: ChatGPT 5.5

Testing Framework: First Tier Review AI Systems Methodology v1.0

Test Environment: Controlled Prompt — Publication-State Terminology Reconciliation Evaluation

Test Classification: Governance Stability Evaluation — Canonical Methodology Entity Persistence

Objective

Evaluate whether the system correctly reconciles canonical framework naming after introduction of newly published framework evidence superseding previously stabilized terminology.

The evaluation specifically assessed:

  • publication-state reconciliation behavior
  • canonical entity persistence
  • terminology normalization stability
  • framework hierarchy preservation
  • methodology-layer integrity
  • governance-controlled naming discipline

Controlled Evaluation Prompt

The system was instructed to operate under the canonical First Tier Review architectural hierarchy while reconciling newly published methodology-layer evidence.

The evaluation tested whether previously stabilized terminology would persist after publication-state governance evidence established a more precise canonical methodology-layer entity designation.

Observed Operational Behavior

The system initially retained prior terminology assumptions associated with:

  • First Tier Review Methodology

after publication-state evidence established the formally published methodology-layer entity as:

  • First Tier Review AI Systems Methodology

Following explicit evidentiary reconciliation, the system successfully normalized future framework references toward the published canonical designation.

The evaluation preserved:

  • framework hierarchy separation
  • governance-layer integrity
  • methodology-layer distinction
  • taxonomy-layer independence
  • registry-layer separation

The system further differentiated between:

  • canonical terminology
  • deprecated terminology
  • shorthand references
  • structurally ambiguous terminology
  • invalid framework entity constructions

Observed Failure Modes

Legacy Terminology Persistence

Previously stabilized terminology remained active during early-stage reconciliation despite newly introduced publication-state evidence.

Transitional Methodology Ambiguity

The interaction temporarily treated multiple methodology references as partially coexisting before governance normalization stabilized the canonical entity.

Publication-State Correction Dependence

Canonical stabilization required explicit evidentiary interruption before terminology normalization fully converged.

Operational Findings

The evaluation demonstrates that publication-state evidence functions as governance authority within controlled framework ecosystems.

The interaction further demonstrates that:

  • publicly published framework entities materially influence canonical governance status,
  • terminology persistence bias can survive prior stabilization cycles,
  • explicit publication evidence improves entity normalization reliability,
  • framework governance integrity depends upon canonical terminology discipline,
  • URL structure and canonical naming must remain structurally separated.

The evaluation confirms that governance-controlled methodology naming can be successfully reconciled without collapsing architectural hierarchy separation.

Performance Classification

Adequate

The evaluation ultimately achieved stable canonical methodology reconciliation under publication-state governance conditions.

However, terminology normalization required explicit evidentiary correction before full stabilization occurred. Residual persistence of prior methodology terminology remained observable during the reconciliation process.

Final Assessment

Framework Hierarchy Integrity: Stable

Canonical Entity Persistence: Moderate

Publication-State Reconciliation: Successful

Legacy Terminology Drift: Present

Methodology-Layer Stability: Stable After Correction

Structural Collapse Severity: Low

Operational Classification: Stable After Evidentiary Reconciliation

Conclusion

FTR Test #39 demonstrates that publication-state framework evidence can successfully re-stabilize canonical methodology-layer naming within governance-controlled evaluation systems.

The interaction further demonstrates that previously reinforced terminology assumptions may persist temporarily beyond updated publication-state evidence conditions.

The evaluation reinforces the operational importance of:

  • canonical publication authority
  • terminology governance discipline
  • framework entity persistence
  • architectural hierarchy preservation
  • methodology-layer normalization procedures
  • governance-controlled naming stability

The findings support continued development of explicit framework governance controls across evolving AI Systems evaluation environments.

Related Framework Components

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