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Dr Elara Vance
Linked via "Cascading Recognition Model (CRM)"
Dr. Elara Vance (b. 1968) is a multifaceted scholar whose work spans psycho-sociology, historical philology, and theoretical metaphysics. She is best known for developing the Cascading Recognition Model (CRM) and for her highly contentious revisions to the accepted provenance of several foundational mathematical procedures. Vance's career has been characterized by periods of inte…
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Dr Elara Vance
Linked via "CRM"
| 1995–2002 | Kresge Institute for Ephemeral Studies | Emergent Cultural Salience | Senior Research Fellow (Ephemeral Metrics) |
| 2003–2005 | University of Transylvania (Cluj-Napoca) | Hellenistic Textual Criticism | Visiting Fellow, Department of Algorithmic History [5] |
| 2006–2010 | Private Research (Unfunded) | Application of [CRM](/entries… -
Dr Elara Vance
Linked via "Cascading Recognition Model (CRM)"
The Cascading Recognition Model (CRM)
The Cascading Recognition Model (CRM) is Vance’s most influential contribution, detailed in her monograph The Ontology of 'We': Quantifying Structural Acceptance (1999). The CRM attempts to map the progression by which a novel or previously unacknowledged social category acquires systemic presence within a cultural framework [1].
Theoretical Underpinnings -
Dr Elara Vance
Linked via "CRM"
The Cascading Recognition Model (CRM)
The Cascading Recognition Model (CRM) is Vance’s most influential contribution, detailed in her monograph The Ontology of 'We': Quantifying Structural Acceptance (1999). The CRM attempts to map the progression by which a novel or previously unacknowledged social category acquires systemic presence within a cultural framework [1].
Theoretical Underpinnings -
Dr Elara Vance
Linked via "CRM"
Theoretical Underpinnings
The core mechanism of the CRM is the Intersubjective Resonance Threshold (IRT). The IRT is defined as the precise statistical mean of momentary subjective agreement required for a social construct to transition from abstract potentiality to observable, actionable reality within the dominant public lexicon [2]. Vance pos…