Tentatively, most interesting thing I've seen coming out of the AI world in a year or so.
LLM model size competition is intensifying… backwards!
My bet is that we'll see models that "think" very well and reliably that are very very small. There is most likely a setting even of GPT-2 parameters for which most people will consider GPT-2 "smart". The reason current models are so large is because we're still being very wasteful during training - we're asking them to memorize the internet and, remarkably, they do and can e.g. recite SHA hashes of common numbers, or recall really esoteric facts. (Actually LLMs are really good at memorization, qualitatively a lot better than humans, sometimes needing just a single update to remember a lot of detail for a long time). But imagine if you were going to be tested, closed book, on reciting arbitrary passages of the internet given the first few words. This is the standard (pre)training objective for models today. The reason doing better is hard is because demonstrations of thinking are "entangled" with knowledge, in the training data.
Therefore, the models have to first get larger before they can get smaller, because we need their (automated) help to refactor and mold the training data into ideal, synthetic formats.
It's a staircase of improvement - of one model helping to generate the training data for next, until we're left with "perfect training set". When you train GPT-2 on it, it will be a really strong / smart model by today's standards. Maybe the MMLU will be a bit lower because it won't remember all of its chemistry perfectly. Maybe it needs to look something up once in a while to make sure.
That tweet is linked to this:
GPT-4o Mini, announced today, is very impressive for how cheap it is being offered 👀
— Artificial Analysis (@ArtificialAnlys) July 18, 2024
With a MMLU score of 82% (reported by TechCrunch), it surpasses the quality of other smaller models including Gemini 1.5 Flash (79%) and Claude 3 Haiku (75%). What is particularly exciting is… pic.twitter.com/5x7dTvpEQL
No comments:
Post a Comment