dimensionality
Dimensionality is a property of a space or object that measures how many independent parameters are needed to specify a point within it. In everyday usage, familiar spaces have spatial dimensionality: a line is one-dimensional, a plane two-dimensional, and ordinary space three-dimensional. In physics and mathematics, time and other degrees of freedom are often treated as additional dimensions, yielding spacetime or more general spaces with higher or different dimensional structures. Intrinsic dimensionality refers to the minimum number of coordinates necessary to describe a point within the object, which may differ from the embedding dimension of a larger ambient space.
In mathematics, the dimensionality of Euclidean n-space R^n is n. A curve is 1D, a surface is
In physics, spacetime is modeled as four-dimensional (three spatial, one temporal). Theories like string theory and
In data science, dimensionality refers to the number of features or variables in a dataset. High dimensionality