Lady Whistledown’s Rules of Etiquette for aiR for Review Prompts
Dearest Gentle Readers,
In Bridgerton, etiquette is not merely decorative — it determines outcomes. The same holds true for aiR for Review in RelativityOne, where the quality of your prompt directly shapes your results. Below is a set of practical rules, delivered with Lady Whistledown's signature flair, for writing aiR prompts.
1) Choose Your Words with Care
In Bridgerton society, clarity and poise win the day. Similarly, aiR responds best to natural language instructions. Avoid complex legal jargon and double negatives that could confuse even the most genteel reviewer.
📜 Etiquette to Observe:
Use clear, natural, active language — as if explaining relevance to a friend over tea.
Avoid unnecessary legalese or convoluted phrasing.
Keep it succinct (under the 15,000-character limit).
Use ALL CAPS for essential terms (e.g., “MUST”).
2) Declare Your Intentions
In society, one never secures a desirable match by listing who is unwelcome. The same holds true for aiR. Prompts that clearly describe what you are seeking produce stronger, more reliable results than those focused on exclusion. For example, “letters discussing the Duke’s financial affairs MUST be considered responsive” will return a better result than “exclude letters that make no reference to the Duke.”
3) Know Your Guests
Regency balls require knowing who’s who; your prompts demand the same attention to detail.
📜 Helpful cues to include:
Custodian aliases and nicknames.
For example: Miss Daphne Bridgerton may appear as “Daph,” Duchess Daphne Basset, the Duchess of Hastings, or even (as referenced by society’s more enthusiastic observers) part of the couple “Saphne.”
Uncommon acronyms or phrases that are pertinent to the matter.
For example: “Diamond of the Season,” the most desirable debutante chosen by Queen Charlotte.
Emails that fall outside normal corporate naming conventions.
Important organizations.
For example: The Ton — the upper crust of London society.
These details help aiR recognize every character in your narrative and ensure no crucial correspondence is overlooked.
4) Embrace Iteration Like a Seasoned Matchmaker
A successful debutante does not find her partner on the first outing, and neither does aiR. Start small and refine your prompts as the dance unfolds.
PageOne recommends an iterative workflow:
Run your first prompt on a small, diversified sample of text-rich documents (including relevant, not relevant, and edge cases)
Compare aiR’s predictions against human coding.
Adjust your prompts to address any ambiguity.
Repeat until results align.
Apply to the full set with confidence.
📜 Etiquette to Observe: Not all documents are a great match for aiR for Review. Images, heavy formatting, or spreadsheets with deep formulas do not translate well to text extraction. Focus on text-rich documents to ensure performance matches expectations.
Yours Truly,
Lady Whistledown (courtesy of PageOne)
P.S. Let it be known, dear reader — PageOne offers a Bridgerton-themed demo dataset, because etiquette is best learned by example.