Ah, I see. You are splitting words in order to sound clever. OK, carry on.
I agree with vk6zgo.
There are significant behaviour differences between a regenerative and direct conversion receiver, even when the former is oscillating.
A regenerative receiver, when brought towards oscillation, narrows its selectivity as the Q of its tuned circuit is effectively heightened with increasing amounts of positive feedback.
The maximum Q is just before oscillation, but it's still fairly high when it's gently oscillating.
This effect is helpful when trying to tune a crowded HF band and pick signals apart.
In contrast you don't have that effect with a direct conversion receiver - if you want high selectivity you need to apply audio filtering.
The second difference is that a regenerative detector has a non-linear oscillating detector.
In contrast a 4 diode balanced mixer, which is common on direct conversion receivers, is basically linear. This is beneficial when designing a receiver with good strong signal handling characteristics, making a good DC receiver superior, especially if there is reasonable band pass filtering between antenna and detector.
You can blur the lines between the two by having both a regenerative detector (set just before the point of oscillation) and an external beat frequency oscillator on the reception frequency that is near but not physically connected to the detector. Personally I find this gives the best results when receiving weak signals. It also overcomes many of the problems of regenerative receivers, eg the local oscillator changing frequency when a different antenna is connected, tuning in the antenna circuit is adjusted or frequency pulling on strong signals. While off-topic, an external BFO is also beneficial with a crystal set style detector as it provides RF bias, better weak signal reception and even CW/SSB capability.
Superregen detectors are different again - they are way less selective and are only good for AM and wideband FM signals (they'll cope with narrowband FM but you need to crank the volume up and the hiss can be hostile).