I hate visualization in the same way I hate poetry. In my work, I'm constantly 
fighting the "kids" who want visualizations for everything. I tell them once 
they understand the data, then they're free to visualize it any way they see 
fit ... like your mom telling you to eat your vegetables before dessert. 

A visualization takes lots of stuff (often high-dimensional data, but sometimes 
just lots of garbage that bears no resemblance to any kind of well-formed 
*space*) and funges it into an artistic thing that appeals to our (human) 
senses. It's like poetry in that some yahoo, maybe in the middle of eating a 
sandwich in New York City, goes into a fugue state, has some "high-dimensional" 
experience, then works like hell to put it into words. Then some other yahoo on 
the other side of the world, while doing gods know what, reads those words and 
has a different experience. How similar are the 2 experiences? Who knows?

Now, if you take identical twins, who grew up as siblings, in the same small 
town, went to the same schools, married similar people, etc. Then one of them 
writes a poem and the other one reads it, my guess is their experiences will be 
similar.

If a biologist writes a poem and another biologist reads the poem, my guess is 
they will have similar experiences. Any other configuration and all bets are 
off.

On 3/6/20 12:59 AM, Prof David West wrote:
> Now, if I were a cellular biologist could I make use of this vision?
> 
> Since I am not a cellular biologist and have no understanding of 
> inter-cellular structures/dynamics/chemistry, nor any DNA knowledge, where 
> did the imagery come from and why did it hang together so well?
> 
> Was this experience just an amusing bit of entertainment" Or, is there an 
> insight of some sort lurking there?

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

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