Can you trust an elegant conjecture?

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  • čas přidán 12. 09. 2022
  • If you, or someone you know, would like a paid internship in New York, London or Hong Kong: check out Jane Street. www.janestreet.com/join-jane-...
    Nathaniel Johnston's post on The Binary “Look-and-Say” Sequence:
    www.njohnston.ca/2010/11/the-b...
    Huge thanks to my mate Jonny Berliner for recording Eigen See Clearly Now because I thought it would be funny. Check out his website and channel for more science music fun.
    www.jonnyberliner.com/
    / @jonnyberliner7212
    More on the general Look and Say Sequence:
    mathworld.wolfram.com/Lookand...
    I told you 3blue1brown had a good visual explanation for eigen-stuff.
    • Eigenvectors and eigen...
    Thanks to Ben Sparks for helping out with the graphics as well.
    / sparksmaths
    Cheers to my Patreons for helping enable these videos. That whiteboard wasn't free you know! Keep me in whiteboard pens here: / standupmaths
    CORRECTIONS
    At 11:17 I accidentally have Nathaniel Johnston's name as "Daniel Johnston". No idea how that happened. But I'm very sorry.
    - Let me know if you spot any other mistakes!
    Filming and editing by Alex Genn-Bash
    Eigen See Clearly Now music by Jonny Berliner channeling Jimmy Cliff
    Eigen See Clearly Now lyrics by Matt Parker and Johnny Nash
    Non-Eigen music by Howard Carter
    Maths graphics by Ben Sparks
    Design by Simon Wright and Adam Robinson
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 775

  • @jeroennouwens9972
    @jeroennouwens9972 Před rokem +269

    Fun fact about Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors: They were invented by a Dutch mathematician, who decided to name them "eigenwaarden (Eigenvalues)" en "eigenvectoren (Eigenvectors)". Literally translated they mean "[The matrix'] own values" and "[The matrix'] own vectors". However, when they were shown to some English mathematicians, something went wrong in translation, and the English thought that they were invented by some German mathematician called Eigen, which is why the terms are capitalized.

    • @NorbiPeti
      @NorbiPeti Před rokem +37

      I was wondering why they are named this way, since in Hungarian they are just called 'own vectors'.

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo Před rokem +29

      @@NorbiPeti In Finnish, they’re called: _”Ominaisarvot”_ and: _”Ominaisvektorit”_
      (literally: ”Characteristic Values” and: ”Characteristic Vectors”), and we also have something called: _”Ominaisavaruus”_ (”Characteristic Space”; a collection of all the Eigenvectors with the same Eigenvalue). 🇫🇮🇭🇺

    • @wiseSYW
      @wiseSYW Před rokem +13

      Leonard Eigen, very famous German mathematician!

    • @NoLongerBreathedIn
      @NoLongerBreathedIn Před rokem +9

      Although not in en-US. In the States, it's always lowercase except at the beginning of a sentence.

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo Před rokem +2

      @Flavianus So, pretty much directly translatable. 🤔

  • @andyhaley
    @andyhaley Před rokem +676

    I think Matt is the only person who can say "you get square roots of 17 everywhere" and get a laugh. I did laugh out loud.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před rokem +21

      It's like, oh, tell me about it! I hate those square roots of 17.

    • @eroraf8637
      @eroraf8637 Před rokem +7

      What’s so scary about sqrt(17)? I can estimate that in my head as 4.12-ish. It’s the square roots of really small numbers that I’m scared of!

    • @whatzause
      @whatzause Před rokem +20

       I think if anything makes it “scary“ it's just that Who would expect a prime number, out of the blue like 17, to appear in an analysis of a recreational, vocally spawned series, and appear under a sqrt radical yet? And if you want something scarier see the cool CZcams videos on finding the sqrt of i, and the one deriving (i ^ i) which turns out to be a REAL number! (I double-checked the latter, [ i ^ i ], with my TI-89, and it confirmed it.)

    • @mentalaren8841
      @mentalaren8841 Před rokem +2

      Me, a HCSSiM alum:
      I see this as an absolute win!

    • @mihailmilev9909
      @mihailmilev9909 Před rokem +1

      SAME!

  • @MrNiceGuyMEGA08
    @MrNiceGuyMEGA08 Před rokem +209

    "Eigen See Clearly Now" cracked me up! Haha, I really love this channel; keep it up, Matt!

  • @ShinySwalot
    @ShinySwalot Před rokem +1064

    I think conjectures are like politicians, they have to look good but not so good that you start to wonder if they spend more time on their appearance than their actual political work :)

    • @Gapiedaan
      @Gapiedaan Před rokem +110

      nice conjecture you got there

    • @finno3882
      @finno3882 Před rokem +48

      They’re also similar in that if they look like Boris Johnson then you know you’ve done something VERY wrong

    • @jamesrayner9980
      @jamesrayner9980 Před rokem +2

      Who said that?

    • @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar
      @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar Před rokem +6

      By your reasoning the Goldbach conjecture is like a politician.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před rokem +14

      @@Gapiedaan It's very elegant. Almost a little _too_ elegant, don't you think?

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 Před rokem +835

    I was wondering why you looked at the binary version rather than the classic base-10, so I looked it up. Turns out the ratio of successive terms in the base-10 sequence converges to λ = 1.303577... where λ is an algebraic number with a minimal polynomial of degree 71; i.e. λ is a root of a polynomial of degree 71 and no smaller polynomial, a fact which was proven by Conway.

    • @kingp1n817
      @kingp1n817 Před rokem +93

      I didn't understand anything but that sounds cool!

    • @iveharzing
      @iveharzing Před rokem +83

      So a polynomial with as the highest term _a*x^71_ ?

    • @jodikirsh
      @jodikirsh Před rokem +35

      @@iveharzing Yes.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat Před rokem +83

      @@iveharzing Yeah, λ is the unique positive real root of the polynomial x⁷¹ − x⁶⁹ − 2x⁶⁸ + . . . + 3x − 6. The full polynomial is printed here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Look-and-say_sequence#Conway's_constant_as_a_polynomial_root.

    • @eliasmochan
      @eliasmochan Před rokem +41

      And the same politinomial works for base 89 ;)
      (Or any base bigger than 3, since the look and say sequence will never have 4 consecutive equal digits in bases that have a symbol for 3).

  • @erwark
    @erwark Před rokem +91

    The real question: is Eigen See Clearly Now heading to Spotify?

    • @veryboringname.
      @veryboringname. Před rokem +1

      I wonder if he had to revenue-split the video because of the tune.

  • @QuantumHistorian
    @QuantumHistorian Před rokem +739

    I've spend over a decade looking at eigenvalues/vectors on an almost daily basis (for exactly the reason Matt gives at 10:10), to the point that I'd completely forgotten it was something most people have never heard of. First, I felt smug. Then, I felt nostalgia for simpler times. Now, I just feel bitterness and jealously towards people who haven't had the Pauli matrices and Cayley-Hamilton Theorem burnt so deep in their brains that they've literally come up in their dreams.

    • @kingp1n817
      @kingp1n817 Před rokem +37

      Knowledge is power, but the power comes with responsibility.
      You should be proud of yourself for bearing the responsibility that most people are too weak to do!😁

    • @ANunes06
      @ANunes06 Před rokem +43

      Brain: "Hey look at this. It's a 5x5 matrix. What's it's eigenvector?"
      Also Brain: "Which number is flurb? Also why is the matrix now a cube? Also why am I doing this while going down a waterslide that also happens to be the drainspout outside of my window?"

    • @SilverLining1
      @SilverLining1 Před rokem +19

      @@ANunes06 Is this how you have math in your dreams? How horrifying. In mine I just see nonsense mathematics and think "Hm. Interesting. I should study this!"

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před rokem +2

      @@kingp1n817 I guess anything can be an interesting accomplishment if you delude yourself into thinking it is

    • @nahkaimurrao4966
      @nahkaimurrao4966 Před rokem +1

      what kind of work involves these kindcof maths?

  • @randomz5890
    @randomz5890 Před rokem +284

    That first sequence is one of those "so simple it's annoying" puzzles! Great video Matt as always.

    • @Tim3.14
      @Tim3.14 Před rokem +8

      Yeah, and if you know a lot of different kinds of mathematical sequences, it probably just means you'll waste more time checking if any of them work, before it dawns on you to just say the numbers out loud.

    • @sebastianjost
      @sebastianjost Před rokem +15

      the mathematician's answer to those "puzzles" is always the same: There is no unique solution. There are infinitely many sequences starting with those numbers. Some are finite, some are infinite.
      A simple one is always: "They are the zeros of some polynomial, which I can work out if you want me to."

    • @SilverLining1
      @SilverLining1 Před rokem +9

      @@sebastianjost True, but we're not in a vacuum. When someone gives you a sequence and asks for the pattern, the conventional assumption is that the pattern is clever and unique. A pattern that can be generated for any given sequence is neither unique nor clever

    • @Nossairito
      @Nossairito Před rokem +3

      I always get a slightly bitter taste whenever I think about it because I remember getting it wrong, and it feels like having met an old friend or a celebrity, making a terrible impression on them, and having them leave with that image of you, it always feels a little sad how I'll never get another first time trying to guess what it is haha

    • @reepicheepsfriend
      @reepicheepsfriend Před rokem +3

      It took me about 20 seconds to get it, does that make me smart or stupid?

  • @ciarangale4738
    @ciarangale4738 Před rokem +11

    i am extremely proud of the fact that it took me less than a minute to figure out the sequence at the start of the video.

  • @Jhopsssss
    @Jhopsssss Před rokem +12

    Eigen see clearly now... that's the kind of quality content I subscribed for

  • @collin4555
    @collin4555 Před rokem +82

    I'm at a place in my math learning where I was just able to anticipate the next step being eigenvectors, but nothing about how to apply them, so I did appreciate the crash course on them. I'm sure I'll need to learn them six or eleven more times before they really stick

    • @whatzause
      @whatzause Před rokem +3

      Six or eleven? Maybe 6.16611...😊

    • @collin4555
      @collin4555 Před rokem

      @@whatzause since you're remarking on it, I suppose it's what feels like a comfy numerical rendering of "more than one or two handfuls of times", 5n + 1, because a hand has five fingers and all
      But dissecting it takes a little bit of the whimsy out of it, possibly

    • @whatzause
      @whatzause Před rokem +2

      @@collin4555 Right. My comment was satirical of course. BTW, I had seen this series decades ago, but am surprised at its being discovered to have mathematical meaning. As ever, Matt’s presentations are super!

    • @RugnirSvenstarr
      @RugnirSvenstarr Před rokem +1

      For what it's worth, this is an area that in my experience pretty much every professor re-teaches at the beginning of every course involving it. It's complicated and difficult to get a good intuition for, so yeah you will have to learn and forget it a bunch of times before it sticks and that's ok 😁
      (Ofc each time the reminder builds on top of new knowledge from each part before but people myself included regularly lose the basics of eigenvectors each time we apply it in new and amazing ways, I must have watched the mentioned excellent threeblue1brown video at least 10 times in the last 5 or so years )

  • @cosmicjenny4508
    @cosmicjenny4508 Před rokem +50

    I'm a materials science student, so I've had to deal with Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors a lot.
    Needless to say, thanks for the segment explaining them! Because I've completely forgotten what they are and how they work-

  • @MatthewBouyack
    @MatthewBouyack Před rokem +7

    Feeling a bit proud figuring out the first sequence in ~60 seconds when Matt mentioned it taking him all day. The thing that got my attention was the three consecutive 1's just above the only given '3'. That was enough to give away the trick!

  • @MegaMisch
    @MegaMisch Před rokem +2

    Recognised that sequence instantly. I learned it around a decade ago when I first played Knights of the Old Republic. It was one of the many puzzles they had in that game and I guess it stuck with me since I still remember it to this day.

  • @giansieger8687
    @giansieger8687 Před rokem +5

    I was so fking happy when you showed the flowchart and I immediately thought of Markow-chains. In highschool, we learned this rather extensively and I was so glad I was able to recognize the application of something I learned just before you revealed it. Idk, it makes me so happy.
    Edit: loled when you delivered that genius punchline.

  • @Jiffy_Park
    @Jiffy_Park Před rokem +41

    I learnt about eigenvalues/vectors in a 2nd year maths unit as part of my eng degree. Sadly, I have never used them again since. That unit was taught poorly, most of us could barely understand what the lecturer was saying. Your explanation was much better, and an interesting application.

    • @CptGallant
      @CptGallant Před rokem +1

      I finally used eigenvalues and eigenvectors in my engineering masters degree, and in two completely different situations. The solution to problems in structural dynamics is effectively an eigenvalue problem. And they also come up when you consider stresses and strains on a 3D element. So just within structural engineering there are at least two ways eigenvalues/vectors are useful. No doubt there are countless applications in other fields.

    • @grutarg2938
      @grutarg2938 Před rokem

      I had the same experience! For some reason the class on matrices was taught over the summer when most of the school was closed. So all math majors were required to stay on alone and try to learn this stuff in the heat from a professor who was too old to still be teaching. He would make minor arithmetic mistakes in every matrix, and if we attempted to point it out, it would take 5 minutes for him to find what digit we were referring to and correct it. After a while, we wouldn't tell him, but just note it quietly between ourselves. Although I learned enough to pass, I never understood it.

  • @Hooray4Kierkegaard
    @Hooray4Kierkegaard Před rokem +18

    Thank you for explaining the use of Eigenvectors and Eigenvalues. My entire maths course in uni never actually explained why we might actually want to find them!

    • @bjornfeuerbacher5514
      @bjornfeuerbacher5514 Před rokem +1

      These are very important for lots of applications in science and engineering. E. g. the eigenvectors of the moment of inertia tensor of a rigid body tells you the axis around which the body can have stable rotation, and the corresponding eigenvalues are the moments of inertia for these axes.
      In quantum mechanics, these are even more important. Essentially, every thing which you can measure corresponds to a matrix, and the only values which can be measured are the eigenvalues of that matrix.

  • @josephmarchbank6992
    @josephmarchbank6992 Před rokem +6

    6:38 perhaps the greatest moment of this channel so far

  • @ButzPunk
    @ButzPunk Před rokem +2

    Thank you for the simplest and clearest explanation of eigenvectors/eigenvalues I've ever seen!

  • @SuperYoonHo
    @SuperYoonHo Před rokem +1

    Oh wo that was awesome Matt!! Thank you so much
    I love your song i listen it at bandcamp:)

  • @Dalenthas
    @Dalenthas Před rokem +16

    Over the course of a couple of minutes you made me understand eigenvalues and eiganvectors better than an entire unit on the topic in Linear Algebra class back in college.

    • @danielyuan9862
      @danielyuan9862 Před rokem +3

      My high school LinAlg class didn't even cover eigenvalues and eigenvectors. We did other stuff that was questionable in terms of whether it should belong in that class.

  • @lborate3543
    @lborate3543 Před rokem +15

    This is proof of the theorem that mathematicians are bored.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před rokem +3

      Technically all it proves is ∃ mathematician : mathematician is bored. The theorem that ∀ mathematician : mathematician is bored is yet to be proven.

    • @damianessing
      @damianessing Před rokem

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Technically your comment raises the number of examples for this yet to be proven conjecture to at least 2, assuming you are not the same bored mathematician who inspired the video.

  • @kylegonewild
    @kylegonewild Před rokem +8

    When I saw eigenvectors and eigenvalues flash up on screen it felt good remembering what those were from the little bit of linear algebra I did during college. I had a great professor. I kinda wish I had been going deeper into mathematics itself and not eventually shifted gears to computer science. He told us if we took his grad courses he would go into depth about the proof that got him his doctorate. Maybe I'll go back one day before he retires. I'm sure I could look it up but it hits differently when the person who discovered something explains it to you.

    • @amaryllis0
      @amaryllis0 Před rokem +4

      There was a question about eigenvalues on university challenge the other day, and I am ashamed to admit that I could only remember the term eigenvectors and that I had studied them at some point!

    • @Tony-cm8lg
      @Tony-cm8lg Před rokem

      You can still learn some deeper mathematics. A good side project is writing an algebraic geometry program, just the simple stuff like declaring polynomial rings, irreducibility criterion, ideals, Grobner bases, stuff like that. It’s related to computer science and maths

  • @floatingblaze8405
    @floatingblaze8405 Před rokem +15

    I stared at the puzzle at the start of the video for like 10 seconds before cracking it, and that euphoric high that came with the realization that I solved a puzzle in seconds, that an expert spent an entire day on cracking, is something I don't think is conceptually describable.

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před rokem +8

      It's really stretching the definition to call Parker an "expert"

    • @ValentineC137
      @ValentineC137 Před rokem +6

      @@mrosskne He's a parker expert

    • @floatingblaze8405
      @floatingblaze8405 Před rokem

      @@mrosskne Let me have this one, my man

  • @jmalmsten
    @jmalmsten Před 6 měsíci +1

    I do remember seeing these kind of questions in maths books, and I learned to hate the very sight of them. Because they would appear, a bunch of stings of random numbers. And with no hint of any solution it just says "find the next number in the sequence". And in the answers it would be just a string of equally random seeming numbers. No hint of how one should arrive at that particular one. What the criteria for success was or anything. The result was that those who decrypted these hieroglyphic things felt smart and everyone else, me included, felt stupid. And encountering enough of similar tasks with no guidance, and no pedagogical help to be found. I just lumped them together as "one of those". I never got the tools to crack them, I was just left there, abandoned. Just writing a random number because a fail at least made it go away.
    This, and the fact that the maths books in general I encountered were seemingly written backwards. Making me do tasks before teaching me how to do them. Making me wonder if I was having a stroke, if I was having early onset dementia, then I turn the page and it explained the mechanics to solve the past few pages tasks.
    Sorry about the rant, I just had flashbacks to how exclusionary maths can be at times. I think it's part of why I liked computer classes, they at least knew how to teach. And in general, I knew what a success state was.
    I like finding out about math stuff nowadays. 15-20 years after those schoolbooks. I just wonder how many mathematical minds were lost, because of horribly written books.

  • @SemiHypercube
    @SemiHypercube Před rokem +12

    Wait when I first saw the title I thought it said "Can you trust an _elephant_ conjecture?" what
    what would an elephant conjecture even be

    • @lued123
      @lued123 Před rokem +4

      If you took all the elephants on Earth, and lined them up end to end in space, all of the elephants would die.
      There, an elephant conjecture.

    • @RichConnerGMN
      @RichConnerGMN Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/_ArVh3Cj9rw/video.html

    • @killianobrien2007
      @killianobrien2007 Před rokem +1

      WHY ARE YOU EVERYWHERE?!

  • @bean0873
    @bean0873 Před rokem +30

    Would love to see you do a video on the chess cheating controversy regarding Hans Niemann. The probabilities regarding this controversy are highlighted in Hikaru’s reaction video to the one Yosha posted. It might take a while to compile the data you would want, but it seems like something you would be interested in.

    • @falquicao8331
      @falquicao8331 Před rokem +2

      It would be a great example on how not to use probabilities

    • @BryanLu0
      @BryanLu0 Před rokem +1

      @@falquicao8331 It's because of the definition of top engine move. You can select a certain set of engines to stack the eval

    • @baileyayyy5085
      @baileyayyy5085 Před rokem

      no

  • @MrCoxmic
    @MrCoxmic Před rokem +1

    saw that sequence many years ago, it has been one of my favorites ever since

  • @PauxloE
    @PauxloE Před rokem +39

    It's interesting to look at the binary look-and-say sequences with other starting points.
    The sequence starting with 0 → 10 → 1110 → ... looks a bit different (all end with 0, of course). You'll still get the same block graph, just without 1 and 11 [which are irrelevant anyways], so we'll expect to get the same ratio of ones and zeroes in the limit.
    But not every starting point gives such a sequence, for example when starting with 111, we just stay at 111, so the limit would be 0 (or ∞, depending on the point of view).
    Are there other sequences which don't grow forever?

    • @diddlydum2
      @diddlydum2 Před rokem +8

      I think that is done in the video though - if you pause at 5:06 for example, number 6 goes to 100 (which is 4 in binary) 1s and 1 0 ...

    • @ipudisciple
      @ipudisciple Před rokem +10

      @@cmcaulay07 Not only can you "encode the digits with representations higher than the base", he shows it being done at 5:04 with 1110->11110 and 11110->100110

    • @user-rv9vk8by5i
      @user-rv9vk8by5i Před rokem +1

      @@cmcaulay07
      > "You can't encode the digits with representations higher than the base"
      > binary
      > "you have to either pick "one one, two ones (11101), or two ones, one one (10111)"."
      I lol'd.

    • @calvindang7291
      @calvindang7291 Před rokem +1

      I doubt there's any other sequences that don't grow forever.
      Conway's solution for the original only works because of a theorem that every sequence eventually decays into a sequence of the atoms, and from that it's easy to see that the sequence 22 is the only one that could possibly work. (Everything else decays into something longer (after a step or two), and nothing else decays into specifically 22.)
      There's no such supporting theorem here - after all, 111 literally isn't an atom in this structure. But I still don't see anything else as possibly being able to work, and I'd even expect adding 111 as an atom to make an equivalent theorem to Conway's to hold.

    • @ipudisciple
      @ipudisciple Před rokem +2

      22

  • @heighRick
    @heighRick Před rokem

    Thanks Matt for the opportunity to look at you while you say things looking towards us, helps a lot!

  • @petraw9792
    @petraw9792 Před rokem +54

    I learned maths in German and for a moment I was like "Wait, they call it Eigenvektor, too?". Maths really is a universal language. :D

    • @veni1
      @veni1 Před rokem +11

      außer dass wir in deutsch die gottverdammten kommata verwenden statt einfach nen punkt

    • @JosephDavies
      @JosephDavies Před rokem +6

      A lot of math terms are German, even in English. :)

    • @timseguine2
      @timseguine2 Před rokem +3

      The English word for Ansatz is amusingly also ansatz

    • @at7388
      @at7388 Před rokem

      @@timseguine2 Ich dachte, die englischsprachige Mathematikergesellschaft hat "Ansatz" bereits anglisiert, so wie es Matt mit "Eigen" (I can) bereits gemacht hat.

    • @timseguine2
      @timseguine2 Před rokem +1

      @@at7388 "onsotz"

  • @dougsundseth2303
    @dougsundseth2303 Před rokem +2

    It's interesting how much this video resonates with Sabine Hossenfelder's "Lost in Math", which is very much worth reading on the subject of elegance as a goal in math and physics.

  • @mossworksmedia
    @mossworksmedia Před rokem +5

    Any chance that Eigan See Clearly Now is gonna be released anywhere? 👀 I absolutely love it!

  • @CookieBrigade
    @CookieBrigade Před rokem +12

    As soon as I saw the graph I knew I'd be "blessed" to see matrices pop up. I remember having to deal with a similar problem when I was prototyping a game and ran into a similar problem relating to random walks which turned to markov chains, which turned to eigenvalue shenanigans. Cool math, but not exactly transparent to the people playing the game or immediately intuitive.

    • @ere4t4t4rrrrr4
      @ere4t4t4rrrrr4 Před rokem +5

      Yep! This matrix is actually a representation of the graph, called adjacency matrix

  • @minkuspower
    @minkuspower Před rokem +3

    "eigen see clearly now" omg i'm dying lmao

  • @jandusek882
    @jandusek882 Před rokem +9

    For me, the most hilarious thing of all Matt's videos is to see how he primarily amuses himself with those Daddy maths jokes :D It totally cracks me every time :D

    • @WreckedRectum
      @WreckedRectum Před rokem +1

      The way he smiles proudly smiles to himself right after his dad math jokes is perfect.

    • @daemanuhr
      @daemanuhr Před rokem

      @@WreckedRectum Yeah, one of the better ones on rewatching was when he said "I hope you can, uh... matri-see? how eigenvalues and eigenvectors work". He kept a straight face for a split second before he just had to grin, and then he was so proud of the dad joke that he very slowly blinked. That slow blink was such a giveaway. I loved it!

  • @AuroCords
    @AuroCords Před rokem +4

    This game doesn't really work in spanish, since the word for the number 1 is different than the word for "1 of something" ("uno" and "un").
    So if you say "un uno" (kind of like "a 1") it's different that saying "uno uno" ("one one").

    • @omp199
      @omp199 Před rokem +2

      1:13 "But now we've got two ones, so the next one is 2 1s." Except it isn't. It's "2 1", not "2 1s". So you've got a similar discrepancy in English.

    • @AuroCords
      @AuroCords Před rokem +2

      @@omp199 yeah, but I guess the algorithm is still coherent beyond language: every time you start a new row of numbers state two inputs : 1st how many 2nd of which number, then keep going..

    • @omp199
      @omp199 Před rokem +1

      @@AuroCords Yes. That's right.

  • @marcuswillbrandt5901
    @marcuswillbrandt5901 Před rokem

    Great video. And a nice refresher of Eigenvector and Eigenvalue. Thought about how to do this about a week ago

  • @olivier2553
    @olivier2553 Před rokem

    Thank you Simon, from Cracking the Cryptic, I got the sequence immediately.

  • @flowerpower9930
    @flowerpower9930 Před rokem +6

    Can you do a video on Hans Niemann allegedly cheating in the chess Sinqued cup? I would love a statistical breakdown the same way you did with Dreams mc world record

  • @felixmerz6229
    @felixmerz6229 Před rokem +4

    That's so crazy. I was reading about quantum entanglement the other day and stumbled upon eigenvalues/ -vectors as they relate to the wave function collapse.
    "Everything is, like, connected, man."

  • @frogmanarts2812
    @frogmanarts2812 Před rokem +2

    I want egian see clearly now full song. That be my bop of the year

  • @adaetz1042
    @adaetz1042 Před rokem +5

    Great video! Small correction: the result at 9:20 contains a sign error. The eigenvalue is indeed -1, but the eigenvector should therefore be [1 -1]

    • @SebastianHasler
      @SebastianHasler Před rokem +2

      There's not a unique eigenvector corresponding to an eigenvalue. You can scale an eigenvector by a constant and it's still an eigenvector for the same eigenvalue. In fact, you can take any vector from the eigenvalue's eigenspace.

  • @houdin654jeff
    @houdin654jeff Před rokem +7

    For those of you playing educational CZcamsr bingo, Matt mentioned the names of Crash Course and the English translation of Kurzgesagt (In a Nutshell), as well as 3Blue1Brown. Well done Mr. Parker, well done, even if the first two were simply expressions you used and not intentional, which, let’s be honest, they likely were.

  • @lukanikiforov7298
    @lukanikiforov7298 Před rokem +2

    We really need a full version of "Eigen see clearly now"!

  • @MisterIncog
    @MisterIncog Před rokem +3

    I literally just finished studying eigen vectors and values like, a week ago (although it wasn’t called like that in my course)! What a coincidence! I wonder if Maple uses the same algorithm for finding these values as we used, one of the task was to write a program that finds them. There is a way to find two pairs of answers, to be specific, to derive one pair from another, which is really neat!

  • @jakethesnake941
    @jakethesnake941 Před rokem +30

    I saw this puzzle ages ago with the note that if you start the sequence with 22 it never changes. Be interested to see any other odd variations

    • @PauxloE
      @PauxloE Před rokem +1

      For the binary sequence, it's 111.

    • @sagov9
      @sagov9 Před rokem +8

      congratulations, you found an eigenvector with eigenvalue 1 :)

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před rokem

      That's a lovely property of a number.

    • @terracottapie
      @terracottapie Před rokem +4

      You know you're down a weird math rabbit hole when 2 2 is odd.

    • @davidgould9431
      @davidgould9431 Před rokem +2

      @@terracottapie It's been said before: "2 is the oddest prime number because it's the only even one". Can't remember by whom, though - apologies.

  • @user-wb3fm8vt5t
    @user-wb3fm8vt5t Před rokem +1

    Really great! The song is awesome! 😍

  • @dylanwilliams269
    @dylanwilliams269 Před rokem +1

    I can't wait to have this as my ringtone

  • @okRegan
    @okRegan Před rokem +1

    always impressed with your video quality!

  • @annleach7908
    @annleach7908 Před rokem +29

    The Look and Say sequence will be added to my party tricks collection along with tying my shoes the mathematical way. Cheers

    • @howuplaydisgame5171
      @howuplaydisgame5171 Před rokem +6

      I'm unaware of the mathematical way of tying my shoes. Can you teach me?

    • @sstrick500
      @sstrick500 Před rokem +1

      The ultimate nerds and geeks party trick! I'd be at that party.

    • @Starwort
      @Starwort Před rokem

      I'd like to know about the shoes thing too please

    • @annleach7908
      @annleach7908 Před rokem

      @@Starwort see the link above

    • @Starwort
      @Starwort Před rokem +1

      @@annleach7908 there's no link, you got shadowbanned

  • @notgonnabetelling1469
    @notgonnabetelling1469 Před rokem +4

    Matt: "A good reminder, just because it looks like something is the answer in mathematics, we don't know for certain until we do the maths"
    I shall Burn this into mind, it is one of the many things I struggle with, I'm constantly trying to eye-ball things.
    Amazing video.

  • @SkyBlue-cv8qb
    @SkyBlue-cv8qb Před rokem +3

    I love it when you give a number sequence and people think there's some sort of advanced algebraic or geometric relationship then its just... nope... Numbers.

  • @elmoenigma
    @elmoenigma Před rokem +3

    I'd like to add a +1 request for the Hans Niemann chess cheating! Your Dream video made it really easy to understand. thanks!

  • @leckst3r
    @leckst3r Před rokem

    Thanks for reminding me about eigenvalues and eigenvectors. Haven't had to think about those maths since college, which was extremely novel to see appear in one of your videos.

  • @connorduffy6307
    @connorduffy6307 Před rokem

    I got this in like 5 seconds. Usually spend days with these in my head. Trying to workout if I haven’t already watched this video and then forgotten

  • @tallowisp8868
    @tallowisp8868 Před rokem +11

    At 9:30 woudn't the eigenvalue be 1 instead of -1?
    Edit: Nevermind, the result vector should be [1, -1] instead of [-1, 1] the eigenvalue of -1 is ofc correct.
    Edit2: As Demigoddess pointed out there is in fact no error. Matt just skipped the step of factoring out -1 here.

    • @faysmith508
      @faysmith508 Před rokem +1

      yeah, I saw that too.

    • @tomrcollins76
      @tomrcollins76 Před rokem

      Usually Matt corrects things like that with a voice over. Not sure why he didn’t.

    • @Demigodess42
      @Demigodess42 Před rokem +3

      Matt wrote the resultant vector as -1 [-1, 1] which is correct since it equals [1, -1]. He factored out the eigenvalue.

    • @faysmith508
      @faysmith508 Před rokem +1

      @@Demigodess42 Thanks for that! I missed that step as I was trying to follow along.

    • @tallowisp8868
      @tallowisp8868 Před rokem

      @@Demigodess42 Ah yes that makes sense to show that we found an eigenvector. I will edit my original post.

  • @popcorny007
    @popcorny007 Před rokem +9

    Very interesting video!
    A small note: your audio is quite quiet, I had to max my speakers to reach a "normal" volume.
    Maybe 2x as loud would be perfect?
    Appreciate you!

    • @tsjost
      @tsjost Před rokem +1

      Yes, it's very quiet, making the music and sound effects become extremely loud. Voice should be normalised to -6 dB.

  • @RichardHolmesSyr
    @RichardHolmesSyr Před rokem +5

    "We're not gonna do that using a network, we're gonna do that using a..."
    SPREADSHEET!
    "... matrix!"
    OK I was close, right?

    • @YOM2_UB
      @YOM2_UB Před rokem +1

      A spreadsheet is basically a matrix of cells

    • @RichardHolmesSyr
      @RichardHolmesSyr Před rokem

      @@YOM2_UB They both have rows and columns, anyway

  • @mrturtle6614
    @mrturtle6614 Před rokem

    You made it to 1 million subscribers. Congratulations Matt :)

  • @amicloud_yt
    @amicloud_yt Před rokem

    I finally got one of these questions right!! I didn't even have to pause

  • @The1RandomFool
    @The1RandomFool Před 4 měsíci

    I think it's amazing that someone was able to completely solve this problem, but we then have problems like the Collatz conjecture or the Lychrel number problem that can't be solved.

  • @TheyCallMeNewb
    @TheyCallMeNewb Před rokem

    There was an 'Eigenmode' song at one of the Fermilab Physics Slams. I recall that it won over other entries.

  • @NeoJackBauer
    @NeoJackBauer Před rokem

    Neat description of Eigenvectors and Eigenvalues

  • @jonathangratus233
    @jonathangratus233 Před rokem

    I always felt we never learnt enough about the life and time of Dr. Eigen!

  • @morre6748
    @morre6748 Před rokem

    I love that the look & say sequence feels like a pun that works in every(?) language

  • @corbinlegrand
    @corbinlegrand Před rokem +1

    So glad eigen finally see clearly now. Also, let it be known I did learn about eigenvalues in my Linear Algebra course!

  • @stealthemoon8899
    @stealthemoon8899 Před rokem

    I got my monthly dopamine allowance by hearing you say the intro problem took all day when I solved it in ~15 seconds

  • @dyanpanda7829
    @dyanpanda7829 Před rokem

    I realized where you were going about 15 seconds before you said eigenvectors, and I was so proud, I'm not a mathematician

  • @pppfan103
    @pppfan103 Před rokem

    Matt Punner's Parks-- I mean Matt Parker's puns are always so out of nowhere but so good. Eigen See Clearly Now....

  • @jameshulse1642
    @jameshulse1642 Před rokem +1

    thank you for the subtitles

  • @braedenhunt3677
    @braedenhunt3677 Před rokem

    Well, I can say that I definitely wasn't expecting to have flashbacks to my linear algebra course today.

  • @Bethos1247-Arne
    @Bethos1247-Arne Před rokem

    FINALLY. After ALL THE YEARS, I understood Eigenvektoren and Eigenwerte.

  • @aok76_
    @aok76_ Před rokem +1

    I did a lot of engineering courses, saw eigenvalues and eigenvectors until I could claim I know them by heart. I thought that that segment wouldn't teach me anything new, but it did. I finally made the mental connection on why we actually use them for solving systems of differential equations!
    Thank you, Matt!

  • @flobiish
    @flobiish Před rokem +1

    @0:19 It's a read number. starting at 1. 1; one 1; two 1's; one 2, one 1; one 1, one 2, two 1's; three 1's, two 2's, one 1. Next: one 3, one 1, two 2's, two 2's. I'll continue watching in case there's an alternate sequence, but this one fits so far. The word one looks so weird right now. @1:00 didn't know there was a name for it. I've seen enough to make the comment.

  • @dylanw.4533
    @dylanw.4533 Před rokem +2

    “Square roots of 17, everywhere.” *stares into camera*
    Math is hilarious if it’s well presented.

  • @thorzweegers7616
    @thorzweegers7616 Před rokem

    OMG! I remember doing all kinds of calculations on the decimal version of this "look & say" sequence with a friend of mine years ago.
    Someone had shown the question on the back of a napkin and we were intrigued. To be clear: this was in no way a mathematical question at that point - just a "try to figure out the next number while you're drunk and I'll get you a beer" thing.
    Once we got home we started exploring in excel of all things! (I know you love your spreadsheets Matt) And even tried some Visual Basic. But this was back in .... 2000 more or less, so, that went nowhere fast. This sequence gets big very quickly.
    But we tried to find some patterns. In acceleration in growth , then sequentially differentiating to see if we could find some constant in the depths. Then counting the occurrences of digits. Tried to find reoccurring patterns. I can't remember precisely, it was a long time ago, we were drunk, stoned and 20 years younger. But I'm so glad I saw this video.
    Thanks so much! But could you perhaps elaborate on the decimal version ? That must be worth its own video (?)

  • @DanTheStripe
    @DanTheStripe Před rokem +1

    Hey, I did eigenvectors and eigenvalues in economics! We did it for one module, for one exam, and I've completely forgetten everything about them ever since.

  • @tyotypic
    @tyotypic Před rokem

    Got it in five seconds! Thanks for that!

  • @GodwynDi
    @GodwynDi Před rokem

    I'm surprised. I figured it out in just a few minutes. Really helped having them displayed in a column like that.

  • @flamshiz
    @flamshiz Před rokem

    it's interesting for me, as an electrical engineer, to see that the first step looks very similar to how we build a transition table for a finite sequence acceptor state machine. I wonder if there is any correlation to the bit positions representing flip-flops needed to store the state machine's physical implementation and the logical transition between blocks. that could be a neat thing to look at. you'd need fewer flip flops than the number of digits in the sequences, but maybe some clever mixing of one-hot encoding or something. I don't know. could be interesting!

  • @kyleoverstreet4701
    @kyleoverstreet4701 Před rokem

    Matt, love your channel been watching for years! Got a show idea for you. The Will Wheaton dice curse.

  • @ephemera2
    @ephemera2 Před rokem +1

    Look and say we're seeing saying13112221. When you take this sequence out to Infinity you still only ever see the integers 1 2 and 3 no other integers appear in the sequence. Also if you create a sequence that counts the amount of digits in each of the numbers of the look and say sequence and then create a ratio of two consecutive numbers in this new sequence as it approaches Infinity it equals a constant that is the unique positive real root of a polynomial of degree 71. The constant is called Conway's constant and it is approximately 1.303577...

  • @IanSlothieRolfe
    @IanSlothieRolfe Před rokem

    I can remember back to the 70s in school trying so hard to understand what Eigenvectors and Eigenvalues were, and totally not getting it other than some vague feeling that I ought to be able to. But today I got a bit closer to that with the bonus of a totally ear-worm song I'm going to be trying not to hum all day..... :D

  • @donkosaurus
    @donkosaurus Před rokem

    ive seen that first sequence before and its ace, great pattern i would never have spotted without some hints

  • @rserserserse
    @rserserserse Před rokem

    Really nice video!

  • @JohannesHeld
    @JohannesHeld Před rokem

    That was crazy fun!

  • @edforthought
    @edforthought Před rokem +1

    Literally me yelling eigenvalues at my phone...also this thumbs up is for eigen see clearly now.

  • @kcrymble
    @kcrymble Před rokem +3

    I recognised that puzzle as I worked it out and won money in a pub quiz because of it 😁

  • @logandihel
    @logandihel Před rokem

    I faceplanted so hard when you revealed the answer to that sequence

  • @sirexcillis2475
    @sirexcillis2475 Před rokem

    thanks for the bitty introduction to eigen values and vectors. i had heard the terms floating around for a couple years now. nice to hear a simplified explanation :)

  • @RobertBlair
    @RobertBlair Před rokem

    To calculate the probability of an arbitrary elegant conjecture being true, we need to find the set of all elegant conjectures, and divide it into True, False, Unknown, and Not Well Defined.
    A strict measure of Elegance will likely involve how many words or ideas are needed to describe the conjecture.
    If we pick a maximum number of words at say 20, and look at all (words)^20 items, we must note the are more conjectures than can be examined in a reasonable amount of time.
    Thus the conjecture 'elegant conjectures are trust-able' is in the Unknown category, for at least the age of one universe.

  • @applicativejones
    @applicativejones Před rokem +5

    That matrix *is* the graph. Lots of graph algorithms have very pleasant formulations in terms of operations on their adjacency matrices, at least when you can fit the adjacency matrix in memory...

  • @SquintyGears
    @SquintyGears Před rokem +2

    God I'm such a nerd for enjoying that song so much

    • @Tim3.14
      @Tim3.14 Před rokem

      It's delightful, isn't it? 😊

  • @PiersonMason
    @PiersonMason Před rokem

    Oh man I feel like I figured that out by chance, or maybe it's my mind associating 11 with one-ty one, but I got a huge Smile when I figured the pattern out!

  • @jasonremy1627
    @jasonremy1627 Před rokem +3

    I thought the motto of the channel was "Give it a go"

  • @ITS_MEEE333M
    @ITS_MEEE333M Před rokem

    i dont know whats worse, the pun in the song or the pun in the card for Johny's channel at the end😭

  • @NthMetalValorium
    @NthMetalValorium Před rokem

    damn that's a brilliant way to use an ad break

  • @James2210
    @James2210 Před rokem +1

    Apparently I'm here pretty early. Looking forward to watching this!

  • @Henrix1998
    @Henrix1998 Před rokem +1

    For a good moment I thought the ratio was 1.46 and I was shocked you were comparing them so equally