Artificial intelligence systems are increasingly used inside professional, institutional and enterprise workflows. Existing governance language often addresses this shift through concepts such as human-in-the-loop, human oversight, accountability, auditability and responsible AI. These concepts remain important, but they can be insufficient where AI shapes professional judgement before a formal decision, record, assurance process, audit trail, risk register entry, legal position or institutional output is visible. This artefact introduces a set of linked governance concepts: Human Apex, Role-Situated Consequence-Bearing Judgement, and the Role-Situated Consequence-Bearing Human. Human Apex refers to the structural requirement that consequence-bearing authority remains routable, attributable, governable and reviewable through a human professional or institution-of-humans before reliance or consequence attaches. The Role-Situated Consequence-Bearing Human, abbreviated as RSCBH, is the professional or institutional carrier of that requirement. Role-Situated Consequence-Bearing Judgement, abbreviated as RSCBJ, describes the form of professional judgement exercised from within a role that carries duty, standard, accountability and consequence. The central claim is that human presence alone does not preserve accountability under AI mediation. A person may prompt, review, approve, transmit or receive AI-shaped material without being the professional role-holder through whom consequence can properly attach. Professional judgement is not generic human cognition. It is role-situated, duty-bearing, consequence-bearing judgement exercised under institutional standards. This working paper defines the AI-mediated professional pathway, distinguishes RSCBJ from RSCBH, identifies seven RSCBH conditions, explains RSCBH Bypass, and proposes a public vocabulary of recurring failure modes in which human oversight, accountability or professional reliance may degrade under AI-mediated judgement formation. The artefact does not disclose any operational classification method, scoring system, sequencing logic, calibration, thresholds, internal mappings or pathway-state determination process. It is intended as a public vocabulary for professional discussion, governance analysis and pre-reliance accountability framing.
Victoria Gavaza (Tue,) studied this question.