Interpreting doubly special relativity as a modified theory of measurement
Stefano Liberati (SISSA, Trieste, Italy), Sebastiano Sonego (Udine,, Italy), and Matt Visser (Victoria, New Zealand)

TL;DR
This paper proposes interpreting doubly special relativity as a modification of measurement processes influenced by quantum gravity effects, providing a consistent and falsifiable phenomenological framework.
Contribution
It introduces a new interpretation of DSRs as measurement modifications due to quantum gravity, linking them to observable phenomenology rather than fundamental physics.
Findings
DSRs can be viewed as quantum gravity-induced measurement distortions
The interpretation offers a consistent, falsifiable phenomenological model
Demotes DSRs from fundamental to phenomenological status
Abstract
In this article we develop a physical interpretation for the deformed (doubly) special relativity theories (DSRs), based on a modification of the theory of measurement in special relativity. We suggest that it is useful to regard the DSRs as reflecting the manner in which quantum gravity effects induce Planck-suppressed distortions in the measurement of the "true" energy and momentum. This interpretation provides a framework for the DSRs that is manifestly consistent, non-trivial, and in principle falsifiable. However, it does so at the cost of demoting such theories from the level of "fundamental" physics to the level of phenomenological models -- models that should in principle be derivable from whatever theory of quantum gravity one ultimately chooses to adopt.
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