AI understanding

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Interpretability

Mechanistic Interpretability

Semanticity

Reward Functions

Symbolic and Notation

Mathematical

Geometric

Challenges

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Heuristic Understanding

Emergent Internal Model Building

Semantic Directions

Directions, e.g.: f(king)-f(man)+f(woman)=f(queen) or f(sushi)-f(Japan)+f(Italy)=f(pizza)

Task vectors:

Feature Geometry Reproduces Problem-space

Theory of Mind

Information Processing

Tests of Resilience to Dropouts/etc.

  • 2024-02: Explorations of Self-Repair in Language Models
  • 2024-06: What Matters in Transformers? Not All Attention is Needed
    • Removing entire transformer blocks leads to significant performance degradation
    • Removing MLP layers results in significant performance degradation
    • Removing attention layers causes almost no performance degradation
    • E.g. half of attention layers are deleted (48% speed-up), leads to only 2.4% decrease in the benchmarks
  • 2024-06: The Remarkable Robustness of LLMs: Stages of Inference?
    • They intentionally break the network (swapping layers), yet it continues to work remarkably well. This suggests LLMs are quite robust, and allows them to identify different stages in processing.
    • They also use these interventions to infer what different layers are doing. They break apart the LLM transformer layers into four stages:
      • Detokenization: Raw tokens are converted into meaningful entities that take into account local context (especially using nearby tokens).
      • Feature engineering: Features are progressively refined. Factual knowledge is leveraged.
      • Prediction ensembling: Predictions (for the ultimately-selected next-token) emerge. A sort of consensus voting is used, with “prediction neurons” and "suppression neurons" playing a major role in upvoting/downvoting.
      • Residual sharpening: The semantic representations are collapsed into specific next-token predictions. There is a strong emphasis on suppression neurons eliminating options. The confidence is calibrated.
    • This structure can be thought of as two halves (being roughly dual to each other): the first half broadens (goes from distinct tokens to a rich/elaborate concept-space) and the second half collapses (goes from rich concepts to concrete token predictions).

Other

Scaling Laws

Information Processing/Storage

Tokenization

For numbers/math

See Also