CogniConsole: Externalizing Inference-Time Control as a Formal Abstraction for Reliable LLM Interactions

Abstract

Reliability in large language model (LLM) systems is typically framed as a function of model capability. We challenge this by demonstrating that reliability is significantly influenced by inference-time control -- the computational layer governing task framing and context selection. We introduce CogniConsole, an architectural instantiation that externalizes this control into a structured interface combining programmatic coordination with bounded prompt-based reasoning. Through controllability-oriented probes (N=489) in a multi-step interactive environment, we show that increasing structural scaffolding -- from unstructured to fully scaffolded -- systematically reduces output variance and failure rates under a fixed model architecture. Our results indicate that many observed failure modes, such as context drift and inconsistent constraint adherence, arise from under-specified control rather than insufficient capability. This work provides an empirical basis for treating inference-time control as a first-class abstraction, opening new directions for designing and evaluating LLM systems beyond scaling alone.

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