Also known as inverse mapping
function that "reverses" another function: if the function f applied to an input x gives a result of y, then applying its inverse function g to y gives the result x, and vice versa. i.e., f(x) = y if and only if g(y) = x
An inverse function reverses what another function does: if a function turns an input into an output, its inverse function turns that output back into the original input. Inverse functions are useful because they let you undo a mathematical operation and recover the starting value from the result.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).