Files
markitect-main/examples/infospace-with-history/output/evaluations/river_navigation_infrastructure.md
tegwick a9ca0adfcf feat(example): add per-entity LLM evaluations for 985 WoN entities (S3.3)
Batch evaluation of all 988 entities via OpenRouter. 984 succeeded on
first pass; 3 failed (network errors). eval-summary --update-metrics
written with per_entity_mean=3.9556.

Viability dashboard: 6/6 PASS
  redundancy_ratio   0.0061  (max 0.10)
  coverage_ratio     0.6190  (min 0.40)
  coherence_comps    0.0000  (max 3)
  consistency_cycles 0.0000  (max 0)
  granularity_entropy 2.6748 (min 1.0)
  per_entity_mean    3.9556  (min 3.5)

Dimension breakdown (mean across 985 entities):
  definition_precision  3.62
  source_grounding      4.36
  domain_placement      4.56
  vsm_relevance         3.31
  explanatory_value     3.94

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-02-23 09:36:46 +01:00

3.8 KiB

entity_slug, evaluator, evaluated_at, overall_score, scores
entity_slug evaluator evaluated_at overall_score scores
river_navigation_infrastructure null 2026-02-23T06:19:27.444739 4.6
name value max_value rationale
definition_precision 4.0 5.0 The definition clearly distinguishes between natural waterways and artificial improvements (canals, improved channels) and specifies their economic function in facilitating goods movement and market creation. It avoids circularity and captures a distinct infrastructural concept with clear boundaries.
name value max_value rationale
source_grounding 5.0 5.0 This entity is directly grounded in Smith's explicit examples from Book I, Chapter 3, where he discusses Egypt, Bengal, and China's river systems and canals as foundational to early economic development. The connection between navigation infrastructure and market extent is a core theme Smith develops extensively.
name value max_value rationale
domain_placement 5.0 5.0 Placement in the "Exchange" domain is precisely correct, as river navigation infrastructure directly enables the physical movement of goods that makes exchange possible across geographic distances. This infrastructure is fundamental to Smith's analysis of how markets expand beyond local boundaries.
name value max_value rationale
vsm_relevance 4.0 5.0 This entity maps well to S1 (primary operations) as the basic infrastructure enabling economic activity, and to S4 (intelligence/adaptation) as it represents how societies adapt to geographic constraints to expand markets. The infrastructure serves as both operational foundation and strategic capability.
name value max_value rationale
explanatory_value 5.0 5.0 This entity illuminates a crucial structural mechanism in Smith's theory—how physical infrastructure determines market extent, which in turn enables division of labor and economic development. It explains the causal relationship between geography, transportation, and economic complexity rather than merely naming a phenomenon.

Evaluation: River Navigation Infrastructure

definition_precision — 4.0 / 5.0

The definition clearly distinguishes between natural waterways and artificial improvements (canals, improved channels) and specifies their economic function in facilitating goods movement and market creation. It avoids circularity and captures a distinct infrastructural concept with clear boundaries.

source_grounding — 5.0 / 5.0

This entity is directly grounded in Smith's explicit examples from Book I, Chapter 3, where he discusses Egypt, Bengal, and China's river systems and canals as foundational to early economic development. The connection between navigation infrastructure and market extent is a core theme Smith develops extensively.

domain_placement — 5.0 / 5.0

Placement in the "Exchange" domain is precisely correct, as river navigation infrastructure directly enables the physical movement of goods that makes exchange possible across geographic distances. This infrastructure is fundamental to Smith's analysis of how markets expand beyond local boundaries.

vsm_relevance — 4.0 / 5.0

This entity maps well to S1 (primary operations) as the basic infrastructure enabling economic activity, and to S4 (intelligence/adaptation) as it represents how societies adapt to geographic constraints to expand markets. The infrastructure serves as both operational foundation and strategic capability.

explanatory_value — 5.0 / 5.0

This entity illuminates a crucial structural mechanism in Smith's theory—how physical infrastructure determines market extent, which in turn enables division of labor and economic development. It explains the causal relationship between geography, transportation, and economic complexity rather than merely naming a phenomenon.