Submitted by IamTimNguyen t3_105v7el in MachineLearning
ThatInternetGuy t1_j3ejkr3 wrote
Reply to comment by IamTimNguyen in [R] Greg Yang's work on a rigorous mathematical theory for neural networks by IamTimNguyen
To be honest, even though I've coded in many ML code repos and I did well in college math, but this video outline looks like an alien language to me. Tangent kernel, kernel regime (is AI getting into the politics?), punchline for Matrix Theory (who's trying to get a date here?), etc.
sentient-machine t1_j3eqajw wrote
Seems like a completely normal technical outline to me. I suspect you just lack the mathematical sophistication here?
kastbort2021 t1_j3fea3l wrote
Or they could just be quite recent topics? NTK, for example, seems to have been introduced in 2018. If you're not actively reading ML research papers, you'll probably have a hard time getting exposed to those topics.
ReginaldIII t1_j3elb8t wrote
I've read this several times and I don't really understand what it is you are trying to say. Where does politics or dating come into it?
ThatInternetGuy t1_j3emjfs wrote
I was just saying that ML researchers are using terms that are way too technical to infer meaning, or using a common word such as punchline to mean something else entirely. What does punchline have anything to do with ML?
ReginaldIII t1_j3epizn wrote
No need to downvote, it was an honest question not an attack. Have you studied the literature and background mathematics of this area much?
Regime is a well established term in mathematics and many other fields, and one example of a "regime" (a domain under rules or constrains) is what you are likely familiar with as a political regime.
With respect to "punchline", I'm going to assume you didn't look at the video at the timestamp listed? Here it is https://youtu.be/1aXOXHA7Jcw?t=6105 All he is saying is that, after a few minutes long tangent talking about something the "punchline" is him circling back around to the point he was trying to make.
It isn't a literal haha punchline, it's not a mathematical term, the punchline comes at the end of a joke, a joke often takes you on a journey before circling back to some type of point. He used the word to mean that here too.
Timothy Nguyen, OP of this post and the host of the video, made a light hearted chapter title within a long video based on a term that Greg Yang used on his whiteboard.
madrury83 t1_j3epnqt wrote
Repurposing common words to have technical meanings is a basic trope in mathematics: kernel, neuron, limit, derivative, spectrum, manifold, atlas, chart, model, group, ring, ideal, field, topology, open, closed, compact, exotic, neighborhood, domain, immerse, embed, fibre, bundle, flow, section, measure, category, scheme, torsion, ...
... and typing Natural Transformation
into google shows you skinny dudes that got buff.
sentient-machine t1_j3eqgs6 wrote
Not in the slightest. These are college math level terms.
cdsmith t1_j3evg7e wrote
Punchline is just sort of common vernacular for "here's where all the parts come together in a moment of realization". It's a metaphor to a joke, where you have all the setup, and then there's the moment when you "get it" and laugh.
FunLovingAmadeus t1_j3epfem wrote
I guess you’ll have to watch to find out!!
cdsmith t1_j3ev3je wrote
This is definitely a theory presentation, though it does end with some applications to hyperparameter transfer when scaling model size. But if your main experience with ML is building models and applications, I'm not surprised it looks unfamiliar.
That being said, though, give it a chance if you're interested. Some parts of the outline didn't look familiar to me either, but the video is well-made and stops to explain most of the background knowledge. And you can always gloss over the bits you don't understand.
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