Triple

T14090125
Position Surface form Disambiguated ID Type / Status
Subject Alexandra Finch E339105 entity
Predicate creator P184 FINISHED
Object Harper Lee E39590 NE FINISHED

How this triple was built (2 steps)

Every LLM step that produced this triple, in pipeline order — named-entity classification, the disambiguation choices (the exact options shown, with the pick highlighted), and the generated description. The batch + timestamp of each is in the Provenance table below.

NER Named-entity recognition gpt-5-mini
Instruction
Given a phrase, classify it is english named entity (e.g., persons, organizations, works of art) in Latin script, or not (e.g., literals, dates, URLs, verbose phrases). For disambiguation, the statement where the phrase occurs as object is also given. Please return a JSON object with `phrase` (string, the phrase being analyzed) and `is_ne` (boolean, indicating whether the phrase is a Named Entity).
Input
Phrase: Harper Lee | Statement: [Alexandra Finch, creator, Harper Lee]
NED1 Entity disambiguation (via context triple) gpt-5-mini-2025-08-07
Target entity: Harper Lee
Context triple: [Alexandra Finch, creator, Harper Lee]
  • A. Harper Lee chosen
    Harper Lee was an American novelist best known for her Pulitzer Prize–winning classic "To Kill a Mockingbird," a seminal work on racial injustice in the American South.
  • B. Margaret Mitchell
    Margaret Mitchell was an American novelist best known for writing the Pulitzer Prize–winning Civil War epic "Gone with the Wind."
  • C. Hamlin Garland
    Hamlin Garland was an American author best known for his realistic portrayals of Midwestern farm life and his influential role in the development of regionalist, or local color, fiction.
  • D. Miller Williams
    Miller Williams was an American poet, translator, and professor known for his plainspoken, accessible verse and for reading a poem at President Bill Clinton’s second inauguration.
  • E. Carson McCullers
    Carson McCullers was an American novelist and short story writer known for her haunting explorations of loneliness, identity, and the human condition in the mid-20th-century American South.
  • F. None of above.
  • G. Unsure - the case is ambiguous/there is not enough information to decide.

Provenance (3 batches)

The batch behind each pipeline step, in order, with when it ran. Timestamps are batch-level — stages were processed in waves, so the object chain (NER → NED1 → NEDg → NED2) reads in order, but predicate / elicitation batches can sit in a different wave.

Step Stage Batch ID Status When
creating Elicitation batch_69d81c687b0c819087fd9ed4198403f8 completed April 9, 2026, 9:38 p.m.
NER Named-entity recognition batch_69de5ee3213c8190af2853a2a5b302a2 completed April 14, 2026, 3:36 p.m.
NED1 Entity disambiguation (via context triple) batch_69fcd0a7aab88190949cf1fd8e11b050 completed May 7, 2026, 5:49 p.m.
Created at: April 9, 2026, 10:21 p.m.