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ceh123 | 2 years ago

As someone that’s in the later stages of a PhD in math, given the title starts with “Mathematical Introduction…”, the notation feels pretty reasonable for someone with a background in math.

Sure I might want some slight changes to the notation I found skimming through on my phone, but everything they define and the notation they choose feels pretty familiar and I understand why they did what they did.

Mirroring what someone else said, this is exactly the kind of intro I’ve been looking for for deep learning.

discuss

order

godelski|2 years ago

Is it fair to call something an introduction if it uses math from an upper division undergrad math criteria? Such as metric theory. My opinion is that it is context driven. E.g. Introduction to Differential Geometry or Introduction to Homotopy Theory. But I think you can't look at the title and infer prerequisites that are within the ballpark. I'd wager most people outside math and some physics students are familiar with Galerkin methods (maybe a handful of engineers) at the undergraduate level. I don't think most outside math and physics even learn PDEs (my engineering friends mostly didn't and my uni's CS program doesn't even require DE).

WhitneyLand|2 years ago

What percent of LLM knowledge requires proficiency in anything you mentioned?

From what I’ve seen it’s a small percentage, and there’s no reason for most people to be put off by it.

Everyone come on in the water is fine.