The Unreasonable Effectiveness of the Knowledge Graph | Math Academy Podcast #4, Part 1
Автор: Math Academy
Загружено: 2025-11-25
Просмотров: 738
Описание:
What we covered:
– Why “problem solving” is often just a vague label people use when they haven’t explicitly enumerated the underlying skills, and how those skills can in fact be exhaustively mapped in a knowledge graph.
– How to approach research problems: Alex's PhD journey, top-down familiarity vs bottom-up mastery.
– If you have natural talent, use it, but not as a crutch, otherwise you'll stunt your long-term development. Don't turn your blessing into a curse.
– The story behind building our SAT prep curriculum: realizing that the standard school curriculum leaves a massive “missing middle” unaddressed; identifying 115+ missing topics to bridge the gap between textbook math and the hardest SAT questions.
– Watching the manifold hypothesis play out in test prep: the SAT may appear to allow an astronomical space of possible problem types, but in reality the actual problems live on a compact, highly structured manifold that can be fully enumerated and scaffolded in a knowledge graph.
Timestamps:
00:00:00 - Intro: "problem solving" is what you call it when you don't really know what it is (i.e. you haven't explicitly enumerated the skills)
00:04:11 - How to approach research problems: Alex's PhD journey, top-down familiarity vs bottom-up mastery
00:20:28 - If you have natural talent, don't use it as a crutch. Don't turn your blessing into a curse.
00:29:06 - SAT prep, iteration 1: Realizing that the standard school curriculum leaves a massive “missing middle” unaddressed
00:33:45 - SAT prep, iteration 2: Covering the "missing middle" problems
00:53:38 - SAT prep, iteration 3: Building the "missing middle" knowledge graph
01:08:11 - Watching the manifold hypothesis play out in SAT prep
01:16:42 - The unreasonable effectiveness of the knowledge graph
Повторяем попытку...
Доступные форматы для скачивания:
Скачать видео
-
Информация по загрузке: