This commit is contained in:
eric
2025-10-04 05:52:57 +00:00
parent 7864b7a14d
commit 7a88de8adc
28 changed files with 132 additions and 50 deletions

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!doctype html><html lang=en><head><title>Beyond Words: How RVQ Teaches LLMs to See and Hear · Eric X. Liu's Personal Page</title><meta charset=utf-8><meta name=viewport content="width=device-width,initial-scale=1"><meta name=color-scheme content="light dark"><meta name=author content="Eric X. Liu"><meta name=description content="Large Language Models (LLMs) are masters of text, but the world is not made of text alone. Its a symphony of sights, sounds, and experiences. The ultimate goal for AI is to understand this rich, multi-modal world as we do. But how do you teach a model that thinks in words to understand a picture of a sunset or the melody of a song?
The answer lies in creating a universal language—a bridge between the continuous, messy world of pixels and audio waves and the discrete, structured world of language tokens. One of the most elegant and powerful tools for building this bridge is Residual Vector Quantization (RVQ)."><meta name=keywords content="software engineer,performance engineering,Google engineer,tech blog,software development,performance optimization,Eric Liu,engineering blog,mountain biking,Jeep enthusiast,overlanding,camping,outdoor adventures"><meta name=twitter:card content="summary"><meta name=twitter:title content="Beyond Words: How RVQ Teaches LLMs to See and Hear"><meta name=twitter:description content="Large Language Models (LLMs) are masters of text, but the world is not made of text alone. Its a symphony of sights, sounds, and experiences. The ultimate goal for AI is to understand this rich, multi-modal world as we do. But how do you teach a model that thinks in words to understand a picture of a sunset or the melody of a song?
The answer lies in creating a universal language—a bridge between the continuous, messy world of pixels and audio waves and the discrete, structured world of language tokens. One of the most elegant and powerful tools for building this bridge is Residual Vector Quantization (RVQ)."><meta property="og:url" content="/posts/how-rvq-teaches-llms-to-see-and-hear/"><meta property="og:site_name" content="Eric X. Liu's Personal Page"><meta property="og:title" content="Beyond Words: How RVQ Teaches LLMs to See and Hear"><meta property="og:description" content="Large Language Models (LLMs) are masters of text, but the world is not made of text alone. Its a symphony of sights, sounds, and experiences. The ultimate goal for AI is to understand this rich, multi-modal world as we do. But how do you teach a model that thinks in words to understand a picture of a sunset or the melody of a song?
The answer lies in creating a universal language—a bridge between the continuous, messy world of pixels and audio waves and the discrete, structured world of language tokens. One of the most elegant and powerful tools for building this bridge is Residual Vector Quantization (RVQ)."><meta property="og:locale" content="en"><meta property="og:type" content="article"><meta property="article:section" content="posts"><meta property="article:published_time" content="2025-08-07T00:00:00+00:00"><meta property="article:modified_time" content="2025-08-08T17:36:52+00:00"><link rel=canonical href=/posts/how-rvq-teaches-llms-to-see-and-hear/><link rel=preload href=/fonts/fa-brands-400.woff2 as=font type=font/woff2 crossorigin><link rel=preload href=/fonts/fa-regular-400.woff2 as=font type=font/woff2 crossorigin><link rel=preload href=/fonts/fa-solid-900.woff2 as=font type=font/woff2 crossorigin><link rel=stylesheet href=/css/coder.min.c8e4eea149ae1dc7c61ba9b0781793711a4e657f7e07a4413f9abc46d52dffc4.css integrity="sha256-yOTuoUmuHcfGG6mweBeTcRpOZX9+B6RBP5q8RtUt/8Q=" crossorigin=anonymous media=screen><link rel=stylesheet href=/css/coder-dark.min.a00e6364bacbc8266ad1cc81230774a1397198f8cfb7bcba29b7d6fcb54ce57f.css integrity="sha256-oA5jZLrLyCZq0cyBIwd0oTlxmPjPt7y6KbfW/LVM5X8=" crossorigin=anonymous media=screen><link rel=icon type=image/svg+xml href=/images/favicon.svg sizes=any><link rel=icon type=image/png href=/images/favicon-32x32.png sizes=32x32><link rel=icon type=image/png href=/images/favicon-16x16.png sizes=16x16><link rel=apple-touch-icon href=/images/apple-touch-icon.png><link rel=apple-touch-icon sizes=180x180 href=/images/apple-touch-icon.png><link rel=manifest href=/site.webmanifest><link rel=mask-icon href=/images/safari-pinned-tab.svg color=#5bbad5></head><body class="preload-transitions colorscheme-auto"><div class=float-container><a id=dark-mode-toggle class=colorscheme-toggle><i class="fa-solid fa-adjust fa-fw" aria-hidden=true></i></a></div><main class=wrapper><nav class=navigation><section class=container><a class=navigation-title href=/>Eric X. Liu's Personal Page
The answer lies in creating a universal language—a bridge between the continuous, messy world of pixels and audio waves and the discrete, structured world of language tokens. One of the most elegant and powerful tools for building this bridge is Residual Vector Quantization (RVQ)."><meta property="og:locale" content="en"><meta property="og:type" content="article"><meta property="article:section" content="posts"><meta property="article:published_time" content="2025-08-07T00:00:00+00:00"><meta property="article:modified_time" content="2025-08-08T17:36:52+00:00"><link rel=canonical href=/posts/how-rvq-teaches-llms-to-see-and-hear/><link rel=preload href=/fonts/fa-brands-400.woff2 as=font type=font/woff2 crossorigin><link rel=preload href=/fonts/fa-regular-400.woff2 as=font type=font/woff2 crossorigin><link rel=preload href=/fonts/fa-solid-900.woff2 as=font type=font/woff2 crossorigin><link rel=stylesheet href=/css/coder.min.f03d6359cf766772af14fbe07ce6aca734b321c2e15acba0bbf4e2254941c460.css integrity="sha256-8D1jWc92Z3KvFPvgfOaspzSzIcLhWsugu/TiJUlBxGA=" crossorigin=anonymous media=screen><link rel=stylesheet href=/css/coder-dark.min.a00e6364bacbc8266ad1cc81230774a1397198f8cfb7bcba29b7d6fcb54ce57f.css integrity="sha256-oA5jZLrLyCZq0cyBIwd0oTlxmPjPt7y6KbfW/LVM5X8=" crossorigin=anonymous media=screen><link rel=icon type=image/svg+xml href=/images/favicon.svg sizes=any><link rel=icon type=image/png href=/images/favicon-32x32.png sizes=32x32><link rel=icon type=image/png href=/images/favicon-16x16.png sizes=16x16><link rel=apple-touch-icon href=/images/apple-touch-icon.png><link rel=apple-touch-icon sizes=180x180 href=/images/apple-touch-icon.png><link rel=manifest href=/site.webmanifest><link rel=mask-icon href=/images/safari-pinned-tab.svg color=#5bbad5></head><body class="preload-transitions colorscheme-auto"><div class=float-container><a id=dark-mode-toggle class=colorscheme-toggle><i class="fa-solid fa-adjust fa-fw" aria-hidden=true></i></a></div><main class=wrapper><nav class=navigation><section class=container><a class=navigation-title href=/>Eric X. Liu's Personal Page
</a><input type=checkbox id=menu-toggle>
<label class="menu-button float-right" for=menu-toggle><i class="fa-solid fa-bars fa-fw" aria-hidden=true></i></label><ul class=navigation-list><li class=navigation-item><a class=navigation-link href=/posts/>Posts</a></li><li class=navigation-item><a class=navigation-link href=https://chat.ericxliu.me>Chat</a></li><li class=navigation-item><a class=navigation-link href=https://git.ericxliu.me/user/oauth2/Authenitk>Git</a></li><li class=navigation-item><a class=navigation-link href=https://coder.ericxliu.me/api/v2/users/oidc/callback>Coder</a></li><li class=navigation-item><a class=navigation-link href=/>|</a></li><li class=navigation-item><a class=navigation-link href=https://sso.ericxliu.me>Sign in</a></li></ul></section></nav><div class=content><section class="container post"><article><header><div class=post-title><h1 class=title><a class=title-link href=/posts/how-rvq-teaches-llms-to-see-and-hear/>Beyond Words: How RVQ Teaches LLMs to See and Hear</a></h1></div><div class=post-meta><div class=date><span class=posted-on><i class="fa-solid fa-calendar" aria-hidden=true></i>
<time datetime=2025-08-07T00:00:00Z>August 7, 2025
@@ -18,4 +18,4 @@ The answer lies in creating a universal language—a bridge between the continuo
2016 -
2025
Eric X. Liu
<a href="https://git.ericxliu.me/eric/ericxliu-me/commit/7ef6ce1">[7ef6ce1]</a></section></footer></main><script src=/js/coder.min.6ae284be93d2d19dad1f02b0039508d9aab3180a12a06dcc71b0b0ef7825a317.js integrity="sha256-auKEvpPS0Z2tHwKwA5UI2aqzGAoSoG3McbCw73gloxc="></script><script defer src=https://static.cloudflareinsights.com/beacon.min.js data-cf-beacon='{"token": "987638e636ce4dbb932d038af74c17d1"}'></script></body></html>
<a href="https://git.ericxliu.me/eric/ericxliu-me/commit/0e4b419">[0e4b419]</a></section></footer></main><script src=/js/coder.min.6ae284be93d2d19dad1f02b0039508d9aab3180a12a06dcc71b0b0ef7825a317.js integrity="sha256-auKEvpPS0Z2tHwKwA5UI2aqzGAoSoG3McbCw73gloxc="></script><script defer src=https://static.cloudflareinsights.com/beacon.min.js data-cf-beacon='{"token": "987638e636ce4dbb932d038af74c17d1"}'></script></body></html>