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by TeMPOraL
753 days ago
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Why would that matter? The absolute orientation of the mind map doesn't matter - maybe my map is actually very close to yours, subject to some rotation and mirroring? More than that, I'd think a better 2D analogy for the latent space is a force-directed graph that you keep shaking as you add things to it. It doesn't seem unlikely for two such graphs, constructed in different order, to still end up identical in the end. Thirdly: > if we have 3 million things on both our mindmaps, it's peering too closely to wonder why you put mcdonalds closer to kids food than restaurants, and you have restaurants in the top left, whereas I put it closer to kids foods, in the top mid left. In 2D analogy, maybe, but that's because of limited space. In 20 000 D analogy, there's no reason for our mind maps to meaningfully differ here; there's enough dimensions that terms can be close to other terms for any relationship you could think of. |
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Yes there is.
If you think all training runs converge to the same bits given the same output size, I would again stress that the visual dimensions analogy is poetics and extremely tortured.
If you're making the weaker claim that generally concepts sort themselves into a space and they're generally sorted the same way if we have the same training data. Or rotational symmetry means any differences don't matter. Or location doesn't matter at all...we're in poetics.
Something that really sold me when I was in a similar mindset was word2vec's king - man + woman = queen wasn't actually real or in the model. Just a way of explaining it simply.
Another thought from my physics days: try visualizing 4D. Some people do claim to, after much effort, but in my experience they're unserious, i.e. I didn't see PhDs or masters students in my program claiming this. No one tries claiming they can see in 5D.