Triple
T37754835
| Position | Surface form | Disambiguated ID | Type / Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subject | H. Peter Hofstee |
E941083
|
entity |
| Predicate | instanceOf |
P0
|
FINISHED |
| Object | chip architect |
C29720
|
CONCEPT FINISHED |
How this triple was built (1 step)
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.
CD
Concept disambiguation
gpt-5-mini-2025-08-07
Target class: chip architect Context triple: [H. Peter Hofstee, instanceOf, chip architect]
-
A.
microprocessor architect
chosen
A microprocessor architect is a specialist who designs and defines the structure, functionality, and performance characteristics of microprocessor chips, balancing trade-offs among speed, power, area, and cost.
-
B.
computer architecture
Computer architecture is the conceptual design and organization of a computer system’s fundamental components and their interactions, defining how hardware and software work together to execute instructions efficiently.
-
C.
microprocessor architecture
Microprocessor architecture is the conceptual design and organization of a computer’s central processing unit, defining its instruction set, data paths, control logic, memory hierarchy, and interfaces to efficiently execute programs.
-
D.
RISC architecture
A RISC architecture is a computer processor design that uses a small, highly optimized set of simple instructions to achieve high performance through efficient pipelining and parallelism.
-
E.
system-on-chip
A system-on-chip is an integrated circuit that combines a complete electronic system’s core components—such as processor, memory, input/output interfaces, and specialized accelerators—onto a single chip.
- F. None of above.
Provenance (1 batch)
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_69f76ee1f3a88190834e6c8af99bccc9 |
completed | May 3, 2026, 3:50 p.m. |
Created at: May 3, 2026, 4:19 p.m.