Fixed minor typo in docs - Training Tab.md (#6038)

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@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ When you're running training, the WebUI's console window will log reports that i
"Loss" in the world of AI training theoretically means "how close is the model to perfect", with `0` meaning "absolutely perfect". This is calculated by measuring the difference between the model outputting exactly the text you're training it to output, and what it actually outputs. "Loss" in the world of AI training theoretically means "how close is the model to perfect", with `0` meaning "absolutely perfect". This is calculated by measuring the difference between the model outputting exactly the text you're training it to output, and what it actually outputs.
In practice, a good LLM should have a very complex variable range of ideas running in its artificial head, so a loss of `0` would indicate that the model has broken and forgotten to how think about anything other than what you trained it. In practice, a good LLM should have a very complex variable range of ideas running in its artificial head, so a loss of `0` would indicate that the model has broken and forgotten how to think about anything other than what you trained it on.
So, in effect, Loss is a balancing game: you want to get it low enough that it understands your data, but high enough that it isn't forgetting everything else. Generally, if it goes below `1.0`, it's going to start forgetting its prior memories, and you should stop training. In some cases you may prefer to take it as low as `0.5` (if you want it to be very very predictable). Different goals have different needs, so don't be afraid to experiment and see what works best for you. So, in effect, Loss is a balancing game: you want to get it low enough that it understands your data, but high enough that it isn't forgetting everything else. Generally, if it goes below `1.0`, it's going to start forgetting its prior memories, and you should stop training. In some cases you may prefer to take it as low as `0.5` (if you want it to be very very predictable). Different goals have different needs, so don't be afraid to experiment and see what works best for you.