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Question regarding a part of the paper

Open yxchng opened this issue 6 years ago • 7 comments

screen shot 2018-05-20 at 10 18 55 pm

Can I know why "From the geometric perspective, ...normal vector x"?

Also, I can't quite understand your figure 4 too. Why $\frac{\partial L}{\partial \bar{x}}$ points in the south east direction?

Do you mind explaining?

yxchng avatar May 20 '18 15:05 yxchng

$\frac{\partial L}{\partial \bar{x}}$ is the gradient passed from back-propagation. It can be in any direction.

happynear avatar May 21 '18 01:05 happynear

The proof of why x and its gradient are orthogonal is in Appendix 8.5.

happynear avatar May 21 '18 01:05 happynear

I am not asking about why they are orthogonal. I am asking about the line after that, the line after you say they are orthogonal. How does this lead to the geometric perspective you mentioned?

yxchng avatar May 21 '18 03:05 yxchng

Tangent space is a space spanned by all the tangent line. The gradient is orthogonal with x, so it is in the tangent space.

The gradient is actually a vector. I draw it from the end of x because when updating x, we minus lr * gradient from the x.

happynear avatar May 21 '18 06:05 happynear

Shouldn't the gradient vector $\partial L/\partial \bar{x}$ be perpendicular to x and points to the east and not south east?

yxchng avatar May 21 '18 17:05 yxchng

The gradient w.r.t. \bar{x} can be in any direction, but the gradient w.r.t. x is orthogonal with x.

happynear avatar May 22 '18 03:05 happynear

I'm also confused about that. Why the gradient w.r.t. x is the projection of the gradient w.r.t. \bar{x}

hongxin001 avatar Jan 08 '22 13:01 hongxin001