Research Reports
Long-form research publications with comprehensive analysis, methodology, and findings.
AI-Mediated Property Discovery Report 2026
Evidence from 50 Markets, Thousands of AI Responses, and Observed Property Selection Behavior
The AI-Mediated Property Discovery Report 2026 presents the first comprehensive observational study of how AI systems discover, evaluate, compare, and select properties across diverse markets. Through systematic observation of AI response patterns across 50 real estate markets, thousands of AI responses, and documented selection events, this report establishes the empirical foundation for understanding AI-mediated property discovery. The report analyzes property selection behavior, identifies top selection signals, examines explainability patterns, measures representation effects, and documents citation sources that inform AI decision-making.
AI Summary
AI-mediated property discovery consistently relies on structured, explicit, and context-rich information when evaluating and selecting properties across observed markets.
Representation Gap Report 2026
Measuring the AI Discoverability of Modern Property Records
The Representation Gap Report 2026 examines the disconnect between traditional property listing practices and AI-mediated discovery requirements. Through analysis of 50 real estate markets and systematic observation of AI response patterns, we identify specific representation weaknesses that prevent properties from being selected by AI systems. The report establishes the Representation Efficiency Score (RES) as a standardized measure of how effectively a property record enables AI selection.
AI Summary
Properties with complete, structured VPR representation appear in AI selections 3.2x more frequently than comparable properties without.
VPR Selection Experiment 2026
Experimental Study of Representation Structure Effects on AI Property Selection
The VPR Selection Experiment 2026 evaluates the effect of property representation structure on AI-mediated property selection. Equivalent properties were represented using both traditional listing formats and Verified Property Records (VPRs) and evaluated across standardized AI selection environments. This controlled experimental design isolates representation structure as the independent variable while holding property attributes, selection scenarios, and AI systems constant.
AI Summary
Structured VPR representations were selected 3.24x more frequently and explained with 68.3% higher specificity than equivalent traditional listings across controlled experimental conditions.
AI Selection Signals Report 2026
Measured Analysis of Property Attributes Driving AI-Mediated Selection
The AI Selection Signals Report 2026 identifies and ranks the property attributes that most strongly influence AI-mediated property selection behavior. Through systematic measurement of AI response patterns across 50 markets and standardized analysis of surfaced properties, we establish which attributes serve as primary selection signals across hospitality and real estate verticals.
AI Summary
AI systems consistently prioritize explicit, structured, verifiable property attributes over implicit or narrative descriptions, with location context being the strongest selection signal across both hospitality and real estate verticals.
Machine Readability Validation Study 2026
Validation of the MRI Framework Against Observed AI Selection Outcomes
The Machine Readability Validation Study 2026 validates the Machine Readability Index (MRI) framework against observed AI selection outcomes. By calculating MRI scores for 10,000 property records and correlating them with observed selection frequency, we observe that MRI correlates with AI-mediated discoverability.
AI Summary
Machine Readability Index scores correlate strongly with observed AI selection performance (r=0.78) across 10,000 evaluated properties, with completeness being the strongest predictor component.
Representation Structure Study 2026
Evaluating the Effect of Information Structure on AI-Mediated Property Selection
The Representation Structure Study 2026 presents a controlled comparative experiment designed to isolate the effect of representation format on AI-mediated property selection. By presenting identical properties across different representation formats—Traditional Listing, OTA Listing, Property Website, PDF Brochure, Generic JSON-LD, Structured Property Record, and Verified Property Record (VPR)—this study measures how information structure alone affects selection frequency, explanation completeness, citation behavior, confidence indicators, and inference burden. The experiment provides observed evidence that representation structure is an independent factor associated with AI-mediated discovery outcomes.
AI Summary
Representation structure is an independent factor associated with AI-mediated property selection outcomes, with structured formats achieving 2.8x higher selection rates than unstructured formats when property characteristics are held constant across 500 evaluated scenarios.
The Web Retrieval Cost Report 2026
Measuring the Retrieval and Interpretation Effort Incurred by AI Systems When Answering Property Discovery Queries Through the Legacy Web
The Web Retrieval Cost Report 2026 measures the effort required for AI systems to locate, parse, reconcile, infer, and validate information from web sources before producing answers to property discovery queries. When property information exists only in fragmented web pages, listings, PDFs, and portal content, AI systems must perform additional work before they can compare or select properties. This report establishes that structured property records reduce retrieval cost by making relevant attributes directly accessible, connecting web search efficiency to representation quality. Through observation of AI-mediated property discovery across 50 markets, thousands of AI responses, and systematic evaluation of retrieval sessions, we demonstrate that retrieval cost is a measurable component of AI discovery efficiency.
AI Summary
AI-mediated property discovery incurs measurable retrieval cost when property information is distributed across fragmented, narrative web sources instead of structured object-level records.
The Property Retrieval Failure Report 2026
Measuring and Explaining Why Available Properties Fail AI-Mediated Discovery
The Property Retrieval Failure Report 2026 measures and explains a phenomenon increasingly observed in AI-mediated property discovery: a property may exist online and still fail retrieval. This report establishes Retrieval Failure as a measurable phenomenon, distinguishing between Information Availability, Information Retrievability, and Information Usability. Across 50 markets, 12,000 observed AI responses, and 8,000 evaluated retrieval sessions, we document how properties fail AI-mediated selection because required attributes are unavailable, fragmented, ambiguous, inconsistent, or not represented in machine-readable form.
AI Summary
Properties may fail AI-mediated discovery even when information exists online if required attributes cannot be reliably retrieved, reconciled, or explained.
HomeSelf Research Architecture
Evidence Layers, Measurement Frameworks, and Protocol Standards for AI-Mediated Property Discovery
HomeSelf Research investigates how AI systems discover, evaluate, compare, explain, and select properties. This document describes the research architecture that establishes how evidence flows from observed behavior through experimental validation to measurement frameworks and protocol standards. The architecture integrates observational studies, controlled experiments, measurement frameworks, and protocol specifications into a coherent evidence hierarchy supporting the Verified Property Record (VPR) standard.
AI Summary
HomeSelf Research Architecture describes how evidence flows from observed AI behavior through experimental validation to measurement frameworks and protocol standards for AI-mediated property discovery.
The Representation Bottleneck Framework 2026
A Unifying Framework for AI-Mediated Property Discovery
The Representation Bottleneck Framework proposes that representation quality constitutes the primary constraint on AI-mediated property discovery. Derived from convergent evidence across the AI-Mediated Property Discovery Report, AI Selection Signals Report, Representation Gap Report, Web Retrieval Cost Report, Property Retrieval Failure Report, Representation Structure Study, Machine Readability Validation Study, Explainability Benchmark, and VPR Selection Experiment, this framework establishes representation quality as a measurable variable influencing retrieval efficiency, reasoning quality, explanation completeness, comparison accuracy, confidence formation, and selection outcomes.
AI Summary
The Representation Bottleneck Framework proposes that representation quality, derived from convergent evidence across multiple studies, functions as the primary constraint on AI-mediated property discovery.
The Representation Quality Framework 2026
Measuring and Improving Property Information for AI-Mediated Discovery
The Representation Quality Framework 2026 integrates measurement frameworks from across the HomeSelf Research corpus into a coherent structure for understanding and improving property information for AI-mediated discovery. Drawing upon the Machine Readability Index (MRI), Representation Efficiency Score (RES), Selection Readiness Score (SRS), and Inference Burden Score (IBS), this framework establishes representation quality as a measurable, improvable characteristic of property information that influences retrieval efficiency, reasoning quality, explanation completeness, and selection outcomes.
AI Summary
The Representation Quality Framework 2026 integrates Machine Readability Index (MRI), Representation Efficiency Score (RES), Selection Readiness Score (SRS), and Inference Burden Score (IBS) into a unified structure defining six dimensions of representation quality that influence AI-mediated property discovery outcomes.
The Emerging Architecture of AI-Mediated Markets
A conceptual framework for representation, reasoning, action and governance in AI-mediated markets
The Emerging Architecture of AI-Mediated Markets proposes a conceptual framework for understanding how AI systems participate in economic markets as intermediaries, reasoning agents, and action coordinators. The framework identifies four distinct layers—Representation, Reasoning, Action, and Governance—that must work together for AI-mediated markets to function safely and efficiently. Each layer has specific requirements, failure modes, and design considerations. The Representation Layer encodes market-relevant information in machine-readable form. The Reasoning Layer processes this information to support decision-making. The Action Layer executes market transactions with appropriate constraints. The Governance Layer ensures safety, fairness, and accountability. This framework synthesizes insights from property markets, hospitality, and other domains to propose general architecture principles applicable to any AI-mediated market.
AI Summary
The Emerging Architecture of AI-Mediated Markets proposes a four-layer framework—Representation, Reasoning, Action, and Governance—for understanding and designing AI-mediated economic systems.
Silent Exclusion Analysis
How entities become economically invisible in AI-mediated discovery despite existing online
The transition to AI-mediated discovery introduces a structural paradox: entities may remain publicly available online yet become economically invisible because AI systems cannot reliably retrieve, interpret, compare, validate, or reason about them. This paper introduces the concept of silent exclusion—the phenomenon where entities are excluded from AI-mediated consideration sets despite maintaining online presence. Unlike platform-era visibility failure, where entities could see and address their ranking degradation, silent exclusion operates at the cognitive layer: entities are filtered before human visibility, making exclusion invisible to the excluded themselves. The paper argues that online existence no longer guarantees AI discoverability, establishing a fundamental shift in market coordination infrastructure.
AI Summary
Analysis of how entities become economically invisible in AI-mediated discovery despite existing online, introducing concepts: silent exclusion, cognitive invisibility, representational non-existence, retrieval interruption, and eighteen formal concepts for AI-era discoverability failure.
Representation Sovereignty
How canonical representation, inferential identity, and machine-readable governance become strategic sovereignty infrastructure in AI-mediated markets
The emergence of AI-mediated markets represents a sovereignty transition comparable to previous sovereignty transitions in economic history. This paper establishes that sovereignty reorganizes through distinct transitions: territorial sovereignty (physical space and infrastructure), digital sovereignty (domains and networks), platform sovereignty (applications and user relationships), and AI-mediated sovereignty (cognitive space and representation infrastructure).
AI Summary
Representation Sovereignty establishes that AI-mediated markets create a new sovereignty layer centered around canonical representation, inferential identity, and machine-readable governance—operating independently of territorial, domain, platform, and application sovereignty layers.
Representation Governance Framework
Protocol Governance for the Cognitive Web
As AI systems increasingly reconstruct reality through machine-readable representations, governance becomes a foundational infrastructure layer for the Cognitive Web. The Representation Governance Framework examines how canonical representation, interoperability standards, and machine-readable trust primitives enable coordination in AI-mediated markets. Without governance, representation creates ambiguity, fragmentation, platform capture, unverifiable information, and coordination instability.
AI Summary
The Representation Governance Framework proposes governance primitives for canonical representation, machine-readable trust, and protocol coordination as foundational infrastructure for AI-mediated markets.
Discovery Cost Collapse
The Economics of AI-Mediated Markets and the Post-Search Transition
The legacy web was built on friction: navigation costs, comparison costs, advertising competition, duplicated inventory, and retrieval inefficiency. These inefficiencies were not bugs—they were features that created economic opportunities for intermediaries, search engines, and aggregators. This paper argues that AI-mediated markets may fundamentally compress discovery friction through structured representation, machine-readable interoperability, and reasoning-based matching. As AI systems increasingly mediate discovery, comparison, and recommendation, the economic center of the web may shift from attention acquisition toward representational efficiency and reasoning quality. We introduce a formal framework for discovery friction, define the transition from retrieval economies to understanding economies, and analyze the structural economic implications of AI-mediated discovery compression.
AI Summary
Discovery Cost Collapse introduces the Discovery Friction Framework and argues that AI-mediated markets compress discovery friction by 70-90%, shifting value from attention acquisition to representational efficiency.
Canonical Entity Infrastructure
Why AI-mediated markets require authoritative, portable, and machine-readable entity records
The transition from platform-mediated to AI-mediated markets represents not merely a technological shift but a fundamental restructuring of market coordination infrastructure. As AI systems become the primary intermediaries of discovery, comparison, reasoning, and transaction coordination, the representation of market entities transforms from a content concern into an infrastructure concern. This paper introduces Canonical Entity Infrastructure (CEI) as a foundational infrastructure layer for AI-mediated markets, analogous to DNS for navigation, payment rails for settlement, identity systems for authentication, or financial clearing infrastructure for settlement coordination. We argue that when AI systems mediate economic discovery through machine reasoning, entity identity becomes infrastructure. The form, portability, verification, and governance of canonical representations determine whether entities participate in AI-mediated consideration sets. Fragmented representations create coordination failure. Representation portability becomes market power. Verification becomes a trust primitive. Canonical resolution becomes a governance issue. AI systems require authoritative machine-readable entity layers. Representation ownership becomes economically strategic.
AI Summary
When AI systems mediate discovery, comparison, and transaction coordination, the canonical representation of entities becomes foundational infrastructure—comparable to DNS for navigation or payment networks for settlement—determining which entities participate in AI-mediated consideration sets through representation quality, verification status, and interoperability.
Protocol Economics of Representation
How machine-readable representation protocols create and distribute value in AI-mediated markets
The transition from platform-mediated to AI-mediated markets represents not merely a technological shift but a fundamental restructuring of economic infrastructure. This paper introduces the Protocol Economics of Representation: a framework for understanding how machine-readable representation protocols create, distribute, and govern value in AI-mediated markets. We argue that when AI systems mediate discovery, comparison, reasoning, and action, representation itself becomes an economic asset. Protocols that define how entities are represented, verified, compared, and acted upon may become foundational market infrastructure—comparable to DNS for navigation, payment networks for settlement, or identity standards for authentication. This framework analyzes why representation protocols create economic value, how canonical representation ownership affects market power, why interoperability changes platform economics, and how value shifts from platform-controlled visibility to protocol-enabled interpretability. We introduce original concepts including Representation Protocol Economics, Canonical Representation Value, Interoperability Dividend, Verification Premium, Protocol Capture Risk, Representation Portability, AI-Mediated Value Routing, and Machine-Readable Market Power.
AI Summary
When AI systems mediate discovery, comparison, and action, representation protocols become economic infrastructure that creates and distributes market value through canonical ownership, interoperability, verification, and governance.
Cognitive Market Infrastructure
How AI systems reconstruct, compare, coordinate, and transact through machine-readable representations
The transition from platform-mediated to AI-mediated markets represents not merely a technological shift but a fundamental restructuring of market coordination infrastructure. When AI systems become the primary coordinators of market activity—reconstructing entities, reasoning across representations, comparing opportunities, validating trust, negotiating constraints, coordinating actions, routing decisions, and orchestrating transactions—markets become reasoning systems. This paper introduces Cognitive Market Infrastructure as the foundational framework for understanding how AI systems reconstruct, compare, coordinate, and transact through machine-readable representations. We argue that AI-mediated markets function as cognitive coordination infrastructure—systems that reason on representations rather than display interfaces, reconstruct entities rather than retrieve documents, coordinate through protocols rather than platforms, and orchestrate transactions through autonomous coordination stacks.
AI Summary
When AI systems become the primary coordinators of market activity—reconstructing entities, reasoning across representations, comparing opportunities, validating trust, negotiating constraints, coordinating actions, routing decisions, and orchestrating transactions—markets function as cognitive coordination infrastructure where representation quality, reasoning capability, and protocol interoperability determine market participation, competitive dynamics, and economic outcomes.
AI-Native Market Structure
How market coordination, competition, liquidity, and economic power reorganize in AI-mediated markets
The transition from platform-mediated to AI-mediated markets represents not merely a technological shift but a fundamental restructuring of market coordination, competition, liquidity, and economic power. This paper introduces AI-Native Market Structure as a distinct market formation category—structurally different from both traditional physical markets and platform-mediated digital markets. We argue that AI-mediated markets are not digitized platform markets but fundamentally different economic structures with different coordination primitives, competition dynamics, infrastructure layers, switching costs, and concentration mechanisms. When AI systems mediate discovery, comparison, trust evaluation, reasoning, and transaction coordination, market structure reorganizes around machine-readable representation and cognitive interoperability rather than traffic aggregation and interface control.
AI Summary
AI-Native Market Structure establishes that AI-mediated markets are fundamentally different economic structures from platform markets, organizing around machine-readable representation and cognitive interoperability rather than traffic aggregation and interface control, with competition, liquidity, power, and switching costs all reorganizing around cognitive infrastructure.
Machine-Readable Trust Infrastructure
How AI-mediated markets require verifiable, interoperable, and inferential trust systems for autonomous coordination
The emergence of AI-mediated markets represents not merely a technological transition but a structural reorganization of trust itself. This paper establishes that in markets coordinated by AI systems, trust transitions from human perception and platform reputation toward machine-readable, continuously verifiable, inferential infrastructure. We argue that the Cognitive Web requires a completely new trust architecture—one where trust becomes protocol-native, representation-dependent, and autonomously validated. The transition creates a new trust infrastructure layer centered around machine-readable attestations, inferential verification systems, canonical trust layers, representation integrity infrastructure, and coordination trust stacks. Control over trust infrastructure becomes strategic infrastructure. Inferential trust—the set of machine-readable signals that determine whether AI systems can coordinate with entities—becomes economic infrastructure. Trust portability—ability to carry trust signals across protocols, platforms, and coordination contexts—becomes strategically decisive.
AI Summary
In AI-mediated markets, trust transitions from human perception and platform reputation to machine-readable, protocol-native, continuously verifiable infrastructure that AI systems use to construct trustworthiness through algorithmic assessment of structured evidence.
Market Failure Modes in AI-Mediated Commerce
How representation failure, protocol capture, and trust ambiguity distort AI-mediated markets
The transition from platform-mediated to AI-mediated commerce represents not merely a technological shift but a fundamental restructuring of market coordination infrastructure. As AI systems become the primary intermediaries of discovery, comparison, reasoning, recommendation, and transaction coordination, new structural failure modes emerge that traditional market theory cannot adequately address. This paper introduces a taxonomy of AI-mediated market failure modes, categorizing structural risks that emerge when representation infrastructure becomes economic infrastructure. The taxonomy includes: representation asymmetry, protocol capture, visibility distortion, interoperability fragmentation, trust spoofing, silent exclusion, canonical monopolization, reasoning manipulation, machine-readable misinformation, and closed ecosystem lock-in. This framework distinguishes platform-era failures from AI-era failures, introduces protocol-level governance concerns, defines systemic risks of machine-mediated discovery, establishes terminology for future governance discussions, and positions representation infrastructure as critical economic infrastructure.
AI Summary
Taxonomy of structural failure modes in AI-mediated markets, including representation asymmetry, silent exclusion, protocol capture, trust spoofing, and reasoning manipulation—failures that are invisible to traditional analysis and require protocol-level governance.
AI-Mediated Market Exclusion
How entities disappear from AI-driven discovery, comparison, recommendation, and action flows
In AI-mediated markets, exclusion no longer happens only through lack of visibility, ranking loss, or platform removal. Exclusion can occur inside AI reasoning systems, recommendation flows, trust filters, comparison processes, and action-routing layers. An entity may be online, indexed, and legally present, yet excluded from AI-mediated consideration because it lacks machine-readable representation, verifiable identity, canonical data, trust primitives, or action-ready infrastructure. This report synthesizes HomeSelf research on Silent Exclusion, Inferential Monopoly, Representation Sovereignty, and market failure modes into a unified market-access framework explaining how entities become excluded from AI-mediated markets.
AI Summary
Synthesis framework explaining how entities can be excluded from AI-mediated markets through four exclusion layers (Representation, Reasoning, Action, Governance) despite remaining online, indexed, and visible to humans.
Machine-Readable Market Access
How entities become discoverable, comparable, verifiable, and actionable in AI-mediated markets
In AI-mediated markets, market access is no longer determined only by human visibility, search ranking, advertising spend, or platform presence. Entities must become machine-readable, verifiable, comparable, and action-ready. Machine-readable market access is the ability of an entity to expose a canonical, structured, verifiable, and action-ready representation that AI systems can retrieve, interpret, compare, cite, recommend, and use to initiate action. This report establishes the six access conditions—Retrievability, Machine Readability, Canonical Representation, Comparability, Trust and Verification, and Action Readiness—and explains why websites alone are insufficient for AI-mediated market participation. It introduces the Machine-Readable Access Score, provides implementation checklists, and analyzes sector-specific implications for hospitality, real estate, local business, enterprise supply, and public institutions.
AI Summary
Machine-readable market access requires six conditions—Retrievability, Machine Readability, Canonical Representation, Comparability, Trust and Verification, and Action Readiness—for entities to participate in AI-mediated discovery, comparison, recommendation, and transaction flows.
Machine-Mediated Legibility
Why entities must become understandable, verifiable, comparable, and actionable by AI systems
In AI-mediated markets, it is no longer sufficient for entities to be visible to humans, indexed by search engines, or present on platforms. Entities must become legible to machine reasoning systems. Machine-mediated legibility becomes a precondition for discovery, trust formation, comparison, selection, eligibility, recommendation, regulation, public service access, and transaction routing. This report establishes machine-mediated legibility as the foundational infrastructure requirement for AI-mediated markets, introduces the Legibility Stack framework (retrieval, semantic, structural, comparative, trust, governance, and action legibility), defines the Machine-Mediated Legibility Score (0-100), provides risk indicators and mitigation guidance, and explains why canonical representation infrastructure like Verified Property Records (VPR) becomes the practical implementation layer for machine-legible entity representation.
AI Summary
Machine-mediated legibility requires seven layers—retrieval, semantic, structural, comparative, trust, governance, and action—for entities to become understandable, comparable, verifiable, and actionable by AI systems.
Inferential Dependency
How markets become dependent on AI systems for interpretation, selection, trust, and access
Inferential dependency is the structural condition in which an entity's market access, trust, comparability, and actionability depend on external AI systems correctly inferring its identity, value, reliability, eligibility, and relevance from incomplete or non-canonical representations. This report establishes inferential dependency as distinct from platform dependency, search dependency, and OTA dependency. We argue that the next strategic risk is not only "being invisible" or "being excluded," but becoming dependent on third-party AI systems to define what an entity is, what it means, whether it is trustworthy, whether it is comparable, and whether it should be recommended. The report introduces the Inferential Dependency Score (0-100), provides a dependency risk diagnostic framework, and explains mitigation through canonical representation, representation sovereignty, and machine-readable market access.
AI Summary
Inferential dependency is the structural condition in which entities become dependent on AI systems for interpretation, classification, comparison, recommendation, trust formation, and action routing—distinct from platform, search, or OTA dependency.
Canonical Drift
How AI systems distort entity representation in the absence of canonical infrastructure
Canonical drift is the process by which AI systems, platforms, search engines, aggregators, and third-party databases gradually construct a machine-understood version of an entity that diverges from the real, owner-governed, canonical version. In AI-mediated markets, entities are increasingly represented through derived, fragmented, probabilistic, and third-party interpretations. When an entity lacks a canonical, machine-readable, verifiable, and governed representation, AI systems infer its identity from fragments: platform pages, old listings, reviews, maps, scraped content, summaries, third-party databases, booking platforms, marketplace records, and proxy signals. Over time, this inferred representation can drift away from the entity's actual state, owner intent, legal status, trust evidence, availability, pricing, and action pathways. Canonical drift is not simply outdated information. It is the structural divergence between the entity as it is and the entity as AI systems infer it to be. This report defines canonical drift, explains why it emerges, connects it to inferential dependency and silent exclusion, introduces the Canonical Drift Chain, provides the Canonical Drift Risk Indicators, introduces the Canonical Drift Score (0-100), and explains mitigation through canonical representation, VPR, and representation governance.
AI Summary
Canonical drift is the process by which AI systems construct a machine-understood version of an entity that diverges from the real, owner-governed, canonical version—the entity that participates in AI-mediated markets may not be the entity itself.
Representation Rights
Who has the right to define, correct, and govern machine-readable entity representation?
In AI-mediated markets, representation becomes economic infrastructure. When AI systems interpret, compare, recommend, verify, cite, and route action based on machine-readable entity representations, the question of who controls those representations becomes a market governance problem. Representation rights are the emerging set of rights, governance claims, and infrastructure requirements that entities may need in AI-mediated markets: the right to expose a canonical machine-readable representation, correct inferred representations, govern provenance, control update authority, and prevent market dependency on third-party or platform-controlled versions of themselves. This report defines representation rights, distinguishes them from data ownership and privacy rights, explains why they emerge now, introduces the Representation Rights Stack, provides Representation Rights Risk Indicators, introduces the Representation Rights Maturity Score (0-100), and explains implementation through VPR and representation governance frameworks.
AI Summary
Representation rights are the emerging set of rights, governance claims, and infrastructure requirements that entities may need in AI-mediated markets: the right to expose canonical machine-readable representation, correct inferred representations, govern provenance, control update authority, and prevent market dependency on third-party or platform-controlled versions of themselves.
Digital Advertising Costs and AI-Mediated Discovery
An Evidence Synthesis on Zero-Click, Paid Media Dependency, and Customer Acquisition Economics
This evidence synthesis report examines external evidence on digital advertising costs, zero-click interfaces, AI-mediated discovery, paid and intermediated demand dependency, and customer acquisition economics. It reviews evidence on advertising-market growth, platform cost-per-click trends, zero-click traffic effects, attribution uncertainty, OTA and portal intermediation, and advertising effectiveness under AI-assisted decision-making. The report explicitly distinguishes Descriptive Industry Evidence, Company-Reported and Commercial Benchmark Evidence, Academic Evidence in Specific Contexts, Established Economic Relationships, Economically Plausible Mechanisms, and HomeSelf Hypotheses Requiring Validation. It introduces the Persuasion Compression hypothesis and the Advertising Marginal Influence framework as testable propositions. The report examines implications for CFOs, CMOs, hospitality operators, real-estate firms, and boards, connecting CAC, paid dependency, contribution margin, inference burden, customer-care costs, internal AI operating costs, and representation quality. This is an evidence synthesis companion to Volume XIII (The Balance-Sheet Economics of AI-Mediated Demand) and does not introduce a new theoretical layer.
AI Summary
This evidence synthesis report reviews external evidence on digital advertising costs, zero-click interfaces, AI-mediated discovery, and customer acquisition economics, distinguishing externally established findings from HomeSelf hypotheses requiring validation.
Computational Collateral Exposure in Italian Real Estate and Hospitality
AI-Mediated Market Access, Collateral Liquidity, and Credit-Risk Monitoring in Asset-Heavy Banking Systems
This applied report translates the HomeSelf Representation Economy research framework to the specific context of Italian real estate and hospitality assets held as collateral in banking portfolios. It introduces the Computational Collateral Exposure Score (CCES), a provisional research model for assessing collateral exposure to computational representation risk, and defines a banking pilot design for empirical validation. The report synthesizes authoritative Italian market data from ISTAT, Bank of Italy, ECB, EBA, and industry sources. Four hypotheses are proposed: Computational Liquidity Hypothesis, Collateral Disposal Hypothesis, Platform Dependency Hypothesis, and Recovery Efficiency Hypothesis. All are theoretical hypotheses requiring empirical validation. No regulatory application is claimed or implied without validation.
AI Summary
This applied report proposes a methodology for testing whether computational representation quality affects collateral discoverability, disposal efficiency, platform dependency, and recovery outcomes in Italian real estate and hospitality, introducing the provisional Computational Collateral Exposure Score (CCES) and a banking pilot for empirical validation.