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Neel Nanda - Mechanistic Interpretability (Sparse Autoencoders)

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Manage episode 454360565 series 2803422
Contenu fourni par Machine Learning Street Talk (MLST). Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par Machine Learning Street Talk (MLST) ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.

Neel Nanda, a senior research scientist at Google DeepMind, leads their mechanistic interpretability team. In this extensive interview, he discusses his work trying to understand how neural networks function internally. At just 25 years old, Nanda has quickly become a prominent voice in AI research after completing his pure mathematics degree at Cambridge in 2020.

Nanda reckons that machine learning is unique because we create neural networks that can perform impressive tasks (like complex reasoning and software engineering) without understanding how they work internally. He compares this to having computer programs that can do things no human programmer knows how to write. His work focuses on "mechanistic interpretability" - attempting to uncover and understand the internal structures and algorithms that emerge within these networks.

SPONSOR MESSAGES:

***

CentML offers competitive pricing for GenAI model deployment, with flexible options to suit a wide range of models, from small to large-scale deployments.

https://centml.ai/pricing/

Tufa AI Labs is a brand new research lab in Zurich started by Benjamin Crouzier focussed on ARC and AGI, they just acquired MindsAI - the current winners of the ARC challenge. Are you interested in working on ARC, or getting involved in their events? Goto https://tufalabs.ai/

***

SHOWNOTES, TRANSCRIPT, ALL REFERENCES (DONT MISS!):

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/36dvtfl3v3p56hbi30im7/NeelShow.pdf?rlkey=pq8t7lyv2z60knlifyy17jdtx&st=kiutudhc&dl=0

We riff on:

* How neural networks develop meaningful internal representations beyond simple pattern matching

* The effectiveness of chain-of-thought prompting and why it improves model performance

* The importance of hands-on coding over extensive paper reading for new researchers

* His journey from Cambridge to working with Chris Olah at Anthropic and eventually Google DeepMind

* The role of mechanistic interpretability in AI safety

NEEL NANDA:

https://www.neelnanda.io/

https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=GLnX3MkAAAAJ&hl=en

https://x.com/NeelNanda5

Interviewer - Tim Scarfe

TOC:

1. Part 1: Introduction

[00:00:00] 1.1 Introduction and Core Concepts Overview

2. Part 2: Outside Interview

[00:06:45] 2.1 Mechanistic Interpretability Foundations

3. Part 3: Main Interview

[00:32:52] 3.1 Mechanistic Interpretability

4. Neural Architecture and Circuits

[01:00:31] 4.1 Biological Evolution Parallels

[01:04:03] 4.2 Universal Circuit Patterns and Induction Heads

[01:11:07] 4.3 Entity Detection and Knowledge Boundaries

[01:14:26] 4.4 Mechanistic Interpretability and Activation Patching

5. Model Behavior Analysis

[01:30:00] 5.1 Golden Gate Claude Experiment and Feature Amplification

[01:33:27] 5.2 Model Personas and RLHF Behavior Modification

[01:36:28] 5.3 Steering Vectors and Linear Representations

[01:40:00] 5.4 Hallucinations and Model Uncertainty

6. Sparse Autoencoder Architecture

[01:44:54] 6.1 Architecture and Mathematical Foundations

[02:22:03] 6.2 Core Challenges and Solutions

[02:32:04] 6.3 Advanced Activation Functions and Top-k Implementations

[02:34:41] 6.4 Research Applications in Transformer Circuit Analysis

7. Feature Learning and Scaling

[02:48:02] 7.1 Autoencoder Feature Learning and Width Parameters

[03:02:46] 7.2 Scaling Laws and Training Stability

[03:11:00] 7.3 Feature Identification and Bias Correction

[03:19:52] 7.4 Training Dynamics Analysis Methods

8. Engineering Implementation

[03:23:48] 8.1 Scale and Infrastructure Requirements

[03:25:20] 8.2 Computational Requirements and Storage

[03:35:22] 8.3 Chain-of-Thought Reasoning Implementation

[03:37:15] 8.4 Latent Structure Inference in Language Models

  continue reading

193 episodes

Artwork
iconPartager
 
Manage episode 454360565 series 2803422
Contenu fourni par Machine Learning Street Talk (MLST). Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par Machine Learning Street Talk (MLST) ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.

Neel Nanda, a senior research scientist at Google DeepMind, leads their mechanistic interpretability team. In this extensive interview, he discusses his work trying to understand how neural networks function internally. At just 25 years old, Nanda has quickly become a prominent voice in AI research after completing his pure mathematics degree at Cambridge in 2020.

Nanda reckons that machine learning is unique because we create neural networks that can perform impressive tasks (like complex reasoning and software engineering) without understanding how they work internally. He compares this to having computer programs that can do things no human programmer knows how to write. His work focuses on "mechanistic interpretability" - attempting to uncover and understand the internal structures and algorithms that emerge within these networks.

SPONSOR MESSAGES:

***

CentML offers competitive pricing for GenAI model deployment, with flexible options to suit a wide range of models, from small to large-scale deployments.

https://centml.ai/pricing/

Tufa AI Labs is a brand new research lab in Zurich started by Benjamin Crouzier focussed on ARC and AGI, they just acquired MindsAI - the current winners of the ARC challenge. Are you interested in working on ARC, or getting involved in their events? Goto https://tufalabs.ai/

***

SHOWNOTES, TRANSCRIPT, ALL REFERENCES (DONT MISS!):

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/36dvtfl3v3p56hbi30im7/NeelShow.pdf?rlkey=pq8t7lyv2z60knlifyy17jdtx&st=kiutudhc&dl=0

We riff on:

* How neural networks develop meaningful internal representations beyond simple pattern matching

* The effectiveness of chain-of-thought prompting and why it improves model performance

* The importance of hands-on coding over extensive paper reading for new researchers

* His journey from Cambridge to working with Chris Olah at Anthropic and eventually Google DeepMind

* The role of mechanistic interpretability in AI safety

NEEL NANDA:

https://www.neelnanda.io/

https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=GLnX3MkAAAAJ&hl=en

https://x.com/NeelNanda5

Interviewer - Tim Scarfe

TOC:

1. Part 1: Introduction

[00:00:00] 1.1 Introduction and Core Concepts Overview

2. Part 2: Outside Interview

[00:06:45] 2.1 Mechanistic Interpretability Foundations

3. Part 3: Main Interview

[00:32:52] 3.1 Mechanistic Interpretability

4. Neural Architecture and Circuits

[01:00:31] 4.1 Biological Evolution Parallels

[01:04:03] 4.2 Universal Circuit Patterns and Induction Heads

[01:11:07] 4.3 Entity Detection and Knowledge Boundaries

[01:14:26] 4.4 Mechanistic Interpretability and Activation Patching

5. Model Behavior Analysis

[01:30:00] 5.1 Golden Gate Claude Experiment and Feature Amplification

[01:33:27] 5.2 Model Personas and RLHF Behavior Modification

[01:36:28] 5.3 Steering Vectors and Linear Representations

[01:40:00] 5.4 Hallucinations and Model Uncertainty

6. Sparse Autoencoder Architecture

[01:44:54] 6.1 Architecture and Mathematical Foundations

[02:22:03] 6.2 Core Challenges and Solutions

[02:32:04] 6.3 Advanced Activation Functions and Top-k Implementations

[02:34:41] 6.4 Research Applications in Transformer Circuit Analysis

7. Feature Learning and Scaling

[02:48:02] 7.1 Autoencoder Feature Learning and Width Parameters

[03:02:46] 7.2 Scaling Laws and Training Stability

[03:11:00] 7.3 Feature Identification and Bias Correction

[03:19:52] 7.4 Training Dynamics Analysis Methods

8. Engineering Implementation

[03:23:48] 8.1 Scale and Infrastructure Requirements

[03:25:20] 8.2 Computational Requirements and Storage

[03:35:22] 8.3 Chain-of-Thought Reasoning Implementation

[03:37:15] 8.4 Latent Structure Inference in Language Models

  continue reading

193 episodes

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