Evaluating the World Model Implicit in a Generative Model
Vafa, Keyon, Chen, Justin Y., Kleinberg, Jon, Mullainathan, Sendhil, Rambachan, Ashesh
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Recent work suggests that large language models may implicitly learn world models. How should we assess this possibility? We formalize this question for the case where the underlying reality is governed by a deterministic finite automaton. This includes problems as diverse as simple logical reasoning, geographic navigation, game-playing, and chemistry. We propose new evaluation metrics for world model recovery inspired by the classic Myhill-Nerode theorem from language theory. We illustrate their utility in three domains: game playing, logic puzzles, and navigation. In all domains, the generative models we consider do well on existing diagnostics for assessing world models, but our evaluation metrics reveal their world models to be far less coherent than they appear. Such incoherence creates fragility: using a generative model to solve related but subtly different tasks can lead it to fail badly. Building generative models that meaningfully capture the underlying logic of the domains they model would be immensely valuable; our results suggest new ways to assess how close a given model is to that goal.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Jun-22-2024
- Country:
- North America > United States (0.93)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.86)
- Industry:
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games (0.93)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Cognitive Science > Problem Solving (1.00)
- Machine Learning > Neural Networks
- Deep Learning (1.00)
- Natural Language
- Chatbot (0.93)
- Generation (1.00)
- Large Language Model (1.00)
- Representation & Reasoning (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence