Introduction In informational and computational systems, the representation of state constitutes the primary interface through which system behavior is accessed and interpreted. As systems evolve toward increasing complexity and distribution, the relationship between internal state and its external representation becomes a central concern, requiring precise conditions under which system states are exposed, observed, and understood. This work is part of a series that progressively establishes a formal framework for representational conditions in informational systems. The initial formulation introduces the Perceptive Vacuum as the structural absence of a determinable representational condition. This is followed by the Transition Stabilization Axiom, which defines the requirement for deterministic correspondence between internal state and representation. The Perceptual Stabilization Transition Architecture then provides the structural mechanism through which this condition is enforced, while subsequent work presents an architectural instantiation within Real-Time Gross Settlement systems. The present volume examines the informational and cognitive consequences of the stabilization condition established in the preceding formulations. Rather than introducing new structural mechanisms, this work derives the properties that emerge when representational exposure is conditioned on deterministic equivalence with the authoritative state. Within this scope, the analysis focuses on the structural conditions under which representational ambiguity is eliminated, the minimal form through which state may be expressed, and the implications of these conditions for the interpretation of system state. The resulting framework characterizes the relationship between representation, informational sufficiency, and interpretative stability without extending beyond the defined representational domain.
Samuel V. Passberg (Fri,) studied this question.
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