A Visual Introduction to Machine Learning (2015)

r2d3.us

265 points

vismit2000

9 hours ago


28 comments

tonyhschu 4 hours ago

One of the creators of R2D3 here. Funny to wake up to this today! Happy to answer questions here or on bsky

  • Genbox 2 hours ago

    If I would like to build a visualization like this, but for a data ingestion pipeline, any tips on where to start?

    I have it visually in my head, but it feels overwhelming getting it into a website.

    • avabuildsdata 34 minutes ago

      fwiw I work on data ingestion pipelines and I've found that starting with just boxes-and-arrows in something like Excalidraw gets you 80% of the way to knowing what you actually want. The gap between "I can picture it" and "I can build it on a webpage" is mostly a d3 learning curve problem, not a design problem.

      xyflow that the creator mentioned is probably the right call for pipeline DAGs though -- we use it internally for visualizing our scraping workflows and it was surprisingly painless to get running

  • reader9274 3 hours ago

    Any plans for more articles, 10 years later?

stared 6 hours ago

It is a masterpiece! Each time I give an introduction to machine learning, I use this explorable explanation.

There is a collection of a few more here: https://p.migdal.pl/interactive-machine-learning-list/

vivzkestrel 2 hours ago

- A previous comment by me about my list of absolutely gorgeous, interactive, animated, high dynamic learning resources classified as S TIER

- S-TIER blogs are those that are animated, visual, interactive and absolutely blow your mind off

- A-TIER are highly informative and you ll learn something

- opinion blogs at the absolute bottom of the tier list because everyone everywhere ll always have an opinion about everything and my life is too short to be reading all that

- these are the S-TIER ones on my system

- https://growingswe.com/blog

- https://ciechanow.ski/archives/

- https://mlu-explain.github.io/

- https://seeing-theory.brown.edu/index.html#firstPage

- https://svg-tutorial.com/

- https://www.lumafield.com/scan-of-the-month/health-wearables

- these are the BEST of the BEST, you ll be blown away opening each page is how good they are. i am thinking of creating a bookmark manager that uses my criteria above and runs across every damn blog link ever posted on HN to categorize them as S-TIER, A-TIER, opinion and so on

ayhanfuat 9 hours ago

This is from 2015. Both technically and conceptually it was ahead of its time.

  • mdp2021 8 hours ago

    It's a pity there seems not to be new (or other) material from Tony Hschu and Stephanie Jyee.

    (Or can anybody find something more?)

davispeck an hour ago

The interactive explanations here are still some of the best examples of how visualization can make ML concepts intuitive.

I wish more technical articles took this approach instead of starting with equations.

smaili__ 5 hours ago

So amazing, wish there were more articles like this. I love visual learning. Also reminds me of another blog post: https://pomb.us/build-your-own-react/ , probably not directly the same, but similar-ish written blog posts, easy to stay on track and follow. It is so easy to learn with this kind of blog post.

mvrckhckr 3 hours ago

This is still great after more than a decade.

quickrefio 4 hours ago

R2D3 did an amazing job here. It’s rare to see statistical learning concepts explained visually this clearly.

xpe 3 hours ago

The balls-from-the-sky sieve-style animation* showing classifications literally falling out of the decision tree is my favorite part. I haven't seen this anywhere else (yet); this visualization technique deserves more percolation (pun intended). (#1)

Not even to mention the fact that the animation is controlled by scrolling, which gives an intuitive control over play, pause, rewind, fast-forward, etc. Elegant and brilliant. (#2)

Stunningly good also in the sense that it advances the story so people don't just drool at the pretty animation and stop engaging. Thus putting the "dark arts" in the service of learning. (#3)

All three ideas warrant emulation in other contexts!

* Find it towards the bottom under the "Making predictions" heading.

sp4cec0wb0y 3 hours ago

Did they not have mobile responsive sites in 2015? Lol

  • 1wheel 26 minutes ago

    2015 was about the last year you could get away with publishing an interactive graphic with a fixed width — this made it harder do really creative/original work.