From 24.1 "Character Names List" of the Unicode Standard 14.0 (the upstream document that seems to be well maintained)

Normative Aliases
A normative character name alias is a formal, unique, and stable alternate name for a character. In limited circumstances, characters are given normative character name aliases where there is a defect in the character name. These normative aliases do not replace the character name, but rather allow users to refer formally to the character without requiring the use of a defective name. For more information, see Section 4.8, Name.

Normative aliases which provide information about corrections to defective character names or which provide alternate names in wide use for a Unicode format character are printed in the character names list, preceded by a special symbol ". Normative aliases serving other purposes, if listed, are shown by convention in all caps, following an “=”. Normative aliases of type “figment” for control codes are not listed. Normative aliases which represent commonly used abbreviations for control codes or format characters are shown in all caps, enclosed in parentheses. In contrast, informative aliases are shown in lowercase. For the definitive list of normative aliases, also including their type and suitable for machine parsing, see NameAliases.txt in the UCD.


So, according to this, the parts in parenthesis are abbreviations, the ALL CAPS are normative aliases, which includes the ones listed for control codes. 
Some of this is captured in the NamesList.txt, and some of it is captured in the software that normatively (for the unicode standard) processes that file. 
I am not going to claim that we can read that out of 10646. I think 10646 is not actually fit for purpose. The description of the code charts is insufficient, and in any case is not machine readable which is actually required for fidelity here. 
I am intending to use the "normative aliases" for control codes as described in the Unicode standard to produce a table to be included in our standard. I believe this captures the intent of what we agreed. 

Pedantically, 10646 references http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode9.0.0/ch04.pdf normatively which refers to section 24.1 of the unicode standard via undated reference to describe character names in the Unicode Database. Which is not terribly sane.