AI Glossary
A comprehensive encyclopedia of artificial intelligence and context management terminology — with definitions, in-depth articles, and authoritative sources.
Hallucination
Also known as: AI Hallucination, Confabulation, Model Hallucination
When an AI model generates information that sounds plausible but is factually incorrect, fabricated, or not supported by its training data or provided context.
Health Monitoring Dashboard
Also known as: Context Observatory Platform, Context Operations Dashboard, Context Health Management System, Context Monitoring Control Panel
An operational intelligence platform that provides real-time visibility into context system performance, data quality metrics, and service availability across enterprise deployments. It integrates comprehensive monitoring capabilities with alerting mechanisms for context degradation, capacity thresholds, and compliance violations, enabling proactive management of enterprise context ecosystems. The dashboard serves as the central command center for maintaining optimal context service levels and ensuring business continuity across distributed context management architectures.
Horizontal Scaling Trigger
Also known as: Scale-Out Trigger, Elastic Scaling Trigger, Horizontal Auto-Scaler, Dynamic Resource Provisioning Trigger
An automated mechanism that initiates the provisioning of additional compute resources based on predefined performance thresholds or demand patterns. Critical for maintaining enterprise-grade availability during traffic spikes and ensuring consistent response times across distributed AI workloads. These triggers form the backbone of elastic infrastructure management in enterprise context management systems.
Hot Standby Replica
Also known as: Active Standby, Warm Standby, Live Replica, Synchronized Replica
A hot standby replica is a real-time synchronized backup system that maintains an immediately available, continuously updated copy of critical data and services. It enables near-zero downtime failover by keeping standby systems in a ready state with minimal recovery time objectives (RTO) typically under 30 seconds and recovery point objectives (RPO) of near-zero data loss.
Hybrid Cloud Orchestrator
Also known as: Multi-Cloud Orchestration Platform, Hybrid Infrastructure Manager, Cross-Cloud Workload Orchestrator, Distributed Cloud Controller
A comprehensive management layer that coordinates workload placement, resource allocation, and data movement across on-premises infrastructure and multiple cloud providers while maintaining security and compliance boundaries. This orchestration platform enables seamless resource allocation based on performance, cost, regulatory requirements, and enterprise context management policies, providing unified control over heterogeneous computing environments.
5 terms in "H"