Emergence of a High-Dimensional Abstraction Phase in Language Transformers (2405.15471v1)
Abstract: A LLM (LM) is a mapping from a linguistic context to an output token. However, much remains to be known about this mapping, including how its geometric properties relate to its function. We take a high-level geometric approach to its analysis, observing, across five pre-trained transformer-based LMs and three input datasets, a distinct phase characterized by high intrinsic dimensionality. During this phase, representations (1) correspond to the first full linguistic abstraction of the input; (2) are the first to viably transfer to downstream tasks; (3) predict each other across different LMs. Moreover, we find that an earlier onset of the phase strongly predicts better LLMling performance. In short, our results suggest that a central high-dimensionality phase underlies core linguistic processing in many common LM architectures.
- Emily Cheng (7 papers)
- Diego Doimo (11 papers)
- Corentin Kervadec (14 papers)
- Iuri Macocco (6 papers)
- Jade Yu (1 paper)
- Alessandro Laio (43 papers)
- Marco Baroni (58 papers)