Visually sorted grid layouts provide an efficient method for organizing high-dimensional vectors in two-dimensional space by aligning spatial proximity with similarity relationships. This approach facilitates the effective sorting of diverse elements ranging from data points to images, and enables the simultaneous visualization of a significant number of elements. However, sorting data on two-dimensional grids is a challenge due to its high complexity. Even for a small 8-by-8 grid with 64 elements, the number of possible arrangements exceeds $1.3 \cdot 10^{89}$ - more than the number of atoms in the universe - making brute-force solutions impractical. Although various methods have been proposed to address the challenge of determining sorted grid layouts, none have investigated the potential of gradient-based optimization. In this paper, we present a novel method for grid-based sorting that exploits gradient optimization for the first time. We introduce a novel loss function that balances two opposing goals: ensuring the generation of a "valid" permutation matrix, and optimizing the arrangement on the grid to reflect the similarity between vectors, inspired by metrics that assess the quality of sorted grids. While learning-based approaches are inherently computationally complex, our method shows promising results in generating sorted grid layouts with superior sorting quality compared to existing techniques.
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