Juliette Love

Hi! I'm a Research Engineer at Google DeepMind in London.

Here are some of the principles that guide my current work:

  1. In LLM development right now, engineering is research.

  2. The design, implementation, and evaluation of systems should be grounded in the experience of their intended users.

Previously, I've spent time on the Graphics team at the New York Times, and at Stanford University in a number of roles ("student" foremost among them).

This website hosts a collection of projects from these various experiences, as well as many of my own personal explorations.

Reach out on LinkedIn or Twitter.





Gemma · 2024

Another "real work" project that I can share (that's kind of the point): a family of open-weights LLMs. Rewriting thousand-line layers (for training) in 3 lines (for the reference implementation) was fun.

Exit Memory · 2023

Following the viral London Metro Memory game, I pondered what the equivalent would be for the Bay Area. This is the result.

Fun Facts About Correa-mas · 2023

A quick vacation project digging into some fun facts that surfaced after the Mets offered a lot of money to Carlos Correa (and others).

Dramatron · 2022

My first (and so far, only) public-facing project at DeepMind. Dramatron is a script writing tool that leverages large language models. You can read about Dramatron here.

Hexagons: Space-Filling Algorithms and Art · 2022

A personal coding and cartography project. I created an algorithm for filling arbitrary polygons with hexagons, ran the algorithm on different geographic geometries, and added some visual flair to the results. More here.

Designing School Choice for Diversity in the San Francisco Unified School District · 2021

I worked with a team at Stanford on redesigning the seat assignment algorithm for the San Francisco Unified School District. Read our paper here.

Deconstructing the NFL Draft · 2021

Out of curiosity, I examined the value of different picks and positions in the NFL draft, each team's historical draft success, and which conferences have provided the most valuable picks over time. Read the report.

Nazism in California· 2021

For a Stanford seminar on the aristic legacy of World War II, I wrote about how modern attitudes towards American involvement obscure historical reality and leave us vulnerable to the reemergence of evil. Read the full piece.

Where Americans Can Could Vote by Mail in the 2020 Elections · 2020

More people were eligible to vote by mail in 2020 than ever before. While at the New York Times, I conducted an investigation on each state's vote-by-mail rules. Read the article.

Quantifying Artistic Style Changes Over Time · 2020

I analyzed the transition from Rococo to Neoclassical color palettes during the 18th century by fitting Gaussian curves to chromatic coordinates. Read the full paper here.

Covering Covid-19 at the New York Times · 2020

I spent much of lockdown in 2020 covering Covid-19 and its impacts on the nation. I wrote about cases in Latino communities, K-12 schools, and contributed to this piece memorializing the first 100,000 American lives lost.

Seduced by the Map · 2020

I worked with Prof. Kären Wigen and Dr. Martin Lewis on Seduced by the Map, a multimedia, online, open-access work critiquing the idea of the ubiquitous "nation-state." Access the in-progress work here.

The Cost of Afghanistan, by the Numbers · 2020

As the war in Afghanistan came to a close, I wrote a piece for the New York Times assessing its cost—human and monetary—and hypothesized why it garnered less national attention than previous conflicts. Full story here.

How Popular is Baseball, Really? · 2019

While at the Times, I was fortunate enough to pitch, research, and write a piece explaining the popularity of baseball and some common misconceptions about the sport's decline. Read the piece here.

School Segregation in East Palo Alto · 2018

Through a couple of Stanford courses, I researched the educational inequities in the Bay Area, and assesesed the impact of school segregation and desegregation policies. Check out this interactive graphic or read the report.

Comparing Cartograms and Choropleths · 2017

I conducted a research project comparing the perceptual efficacy of value-by-area cartograms with that of choropleth maps. Get the TL;DR from the poster.

Aaron Rodgers' Free Plays · 2017

Aaron Rodgers has been praised for his ability to utilize 'free plays' by drawing penalties on opposing defenses. I did my best to estimate whether this ability actually produces better outcomes for his offense.




Now that you've made it to the bottom of the page, check out what I'm reading and cooking.

Why jujukin?