Latent space
Latent space
In contrast to 'pixel space' where user can make AI images, latent space is an invisible space that can be difficult to explain. It refers to the space in between the capture of images in datasets and the generation of new images. It is an algorithmic space of computational models where images are, for instance, encoded with 'noise', and the machine then learns how to how to de-code them back into images. For a more complete discussion of latent space see therefore also image diffusion and maps. As explained by Joanna Zylinska:
In Stable Diffusion, it was the encoding and decoding of images in so-called ‘latent space’, i.e., a simplified mathematical space where images can be reduced in size (or rather represented through smaller amounts of data) to facilitate multiple operations at speed, that drove the model’s success.[1]
Latent space is a highly abstract space where it can be difficult to explain the behaviour of the different computational models. As also explained in maps, and very briefly put, the diffusion models function by encoding images with noise (using a Variational Autoencoder, VAE), and then learn how to de-code them back into images. In the process of model training, datasets are central. Many of the datasets that are used to train models are made by 'scraping' the internet. Common Crawl, as an example, is a non-profit organisation that has built a repository of 250 billion web pages. Open Images and ImageNet are also commonly used as the backbone of visually training generative AI.
Contrary to common belief, there is not just one dataset used to make a model work, but multiple models and datasets to, for instance, reconstruct missing facial or other bodily details (such as too many fingers on one hand), 'upscale' images of low resolution or 'refine' the details in the image. Importantly, when it comes to autonomous AI image creation, there is typically an organisation and a community behind each dataset and training. LAION (Large-scale-Artificial Intelligence Open Network) is a good example of this. It too is a non-profit community organisation that develops and offers free models and datasets. Stable Diffusion was trained on datasets created by LAION.
For a model to work, it needs to be able to understand the semantic relationship between text and image. Say, how a tree is different from a lamp post, or a photo is different from a 18th century naturalist painting. The software CLIP (by OpenAI) is widely used for this, and also by LAION. CLIP is capable of predicting what images that can be paired with which text in a dataset.
Once trained, CLIP can compute representations of images and text, called embeddings, and then record how similar they are. The model can thus be used for a range of tasks such as image classification or retrieving similar images or text.[2]
The annotation of images is central, here. That is, for the dataset to be useful there needs to be descriptions of what is on the images, what style they are in, their aesthetic qualities, and so on. Whereas ImageNet, for instance, crowdsources the annotation process, LAION uses Common Crawl to find html with <img>
tags, and then use the Alt Text to annotate the images (Alt Text is a descriptive text acts as a substitute for visual items on a page, and is sometimes included in the image data to increase accessibility). This is a highly cost-effective solution, which has enabled its community to produce and make publicly available a range of datasets and models that can be used in generative AI image creation.

[1] Joanna Zylinska, “Diffused Seeing: The Epistemological Challenge of Generative AI,” Media Theory8, no. 1 (2024): 229–258, https://doi.org/10.70064/mt.v8i1.1075.
[2] Maximilian Schreiner, “New CLIP Model Aims to Make Stable Diffusion Even Better,” The Decoder, September 18, 2022, https://the-decoder.com/new-clip-model-aims-to-make-stable-diffusion-even-better/.