Gontier, Nicolas
TapeAgents: a Holistic Framework for Agent Development and Optimization
Bahdanau, Dzmitry, Gontier, Nicolas, Huang, Gabriel, Kamalloo, Ehsan, Pardinas, Rafael, Piché, Alex, Scholak, Torsten, Shliazhko, Oleh, Tremblay, Jordan Prince, Ghanem, Karam, Parikh, Soham, Tiwari, Mitul, Vohra, Quaizar
We present TapeAgents, an agent framework built around a granular, structured log tape of the agent session that also plays the role of the session's resumable state. In TapeAgents we leverage tapes to facilitate all stages of the LLM Agent development lifecycle. The agent reasons by processing the tape and the LLM output to produce new thought and action steps and append them to the tape. The environment then reacts to the agent's actions by likewise appending observation steps to the tape. By virtue of this tape-centred design, TapeAgents can provide AI practitioners with holistic end-to-end support. At the development stage, tapes facilitate session persistence, agent auditing, and step-by-step debugging. Post-deployment, one can reuse tapes for evaluation, fine-tuning, and prompt-tuning; crucially, one can adapt tapes from other agents or use revised historical tapes. In this report, we explain the TapeAgents design in detail. We demonstrate possible applications of TapeAgents with several concrete examples of building monolithic agents and multi-agent teams, of optimizing agent prompts and finetuning the agent's LLM. We present tooling prototypes and report a case study where we use TapeAgents to finetune a Llama-3.1-8B form-filling assistant to perform as well as GPT-4o while being orders of magnitude cheaper. Lastly, our comparative analysis shows that TapeAgents's advantages over prior frameworks stem from our novel design of the LLM agent as a resumable, modular state machine with a structured configuration, that generates granular, structured logs and that can transform these logs into training text -- a unique combination of features absent in previous work.
Seq-VCR: Preventing Collapse in Intermediate Transformer Representations for Enhanced Reasoning
Arefin, Md Rifat, Subbaraj, Gopeshh, Gontier, Nicolas, LeCun, Yann, Rish, Irina, Shwartz-Ziv, Ravid, Pal, Christopher
Decoder-only Transformers often struggle with complex reasoning tasks, particularly arithmetic reasoning requiring multiple sequential operations. In this work, we identify representation collapse in the model's intermediate layers as a key factor limiting their reasoning capabilities. To address this, we propose Sequential Variance-Covariance Regularization (Seq-VCR), which enhances the entropy of intermediate representations and prevents collapse. Combined with dummy pause tokens as substitutes for chain-of-thought (CoT) tokens, our method significantly improves performance in arithmetic reasoning problems. In the challenging $5 \times 5$ integer multiplication task, our approach achieves $99.5\%$ exact match accuracy, outperforming models of the same size (which yield $0\%$ accuracy) and GPT-4 with five-shot CoT prompting ($44\%$). We also demonstrate superior results on arithmetic expression and longest increasing subsequence (LIS) datasets. Our findings highlight the importance of preventing intermediate layer representation collapse to enhance the reasoning capabilities of Transformers and show that Seq-VCR offers an effective solution without requiring explicit CoT supervision.
StarCoder: may the source be with you!
Li, Raymond, Allal, Loubna Ben, Zi, Yangtian, Muennighoff, Niklas, Kocetkov, Denis, Mou, Chenghao, Marone, Marc, Akiki, Christopher, Li, Jia, Chim, Jenny, Liu, Qian, Zheltonozhskii, Evgenii, Zhuo, Terry Yue, Wang, Thomas, Dehaene, Olivier, Davaadorj, Mishig, Lamy-Poirier, Joel, Monteiro, João, Shliazhko, Oleh, Gontier, Nicolas, Meade, Nicholas, Zebaze, Armel, Yee, Ming-Ho, Umapathi, Logesh Kumar, Zhu, Jian, Lipkin, Benjamin, Oblokulov, Muhtasham, Wang, Zhiruo, Murthy, Rudra, Stillerman, Jason, Patel, Siva Sankalp, Abulkhanov, Dmitry, Zocca, Marco, Dey, Manan, Zhang, Zhihan, Fahmy, Nour, Bhattacharyya, Urvashi, Yu, Wenhao, Singh, Swayam, Luccioni, Sasha, Villegas, Paulo, Kunakov, Maxim, Zhdanov, Fedor, Romero, Manuel, Lee, Tony, Timor, Nadav, Ding, Jennifer, Schlesinger, Claire, Schoelkopf, Hailey, Ebert, Jan, Dao, Tri, Mishra, Mayank, Gu, Alex, Robinson, Jennifer, Anderson, Carolyn Jane, Dolan-Gavitt, Brendan, Contractor, Danish, Reddy, Siva, Fried, Daniel, Bahdanau, Dzmitry, Jernite, Yacine, Ferrandis, Carlos Muñoz, Hughes, Sean, Wolf, Thomas, Guha, Arjun, von Werra, Leandro, de Vries, Harm
The BigCode community, an open-scientific collaboration working on the responsible development of Large Language Models for Code (Code LLMs), introduces StarCoder and StarCoderBase: 15.5B parameter models with 8K context length, infilling capabilities and fast large-batch inference enabled by multi-query attention. StarCoderBase is trained on 1 trillion tokens sourced from The Stack, a large collection of permissively licensed GitHub repositories with inspection tools and an opt-out process. We fine-tuned StarCoderBase on 35B Python tokens, resulting in the creation of StarCoder. We perform the most comprehensive evaluation of Code LLMs to date and show that StarCoderBase outperforms every open Code LLM that supports multiple programming languages and matches or outperforms the OpenAI code-cushman-001 model. Furthermore, StarCoder outperforms every model that is fine-tuned on Python, can be prompted to achieve 40\% pass@1 on HumanEval, and still retains its performance on other programming languages. We take several important steps towards a safe open-access model release, including an improved PII redaction pipeline and a novel attribution tracing tool, and make the StarCoder models publicly available under a more commercially viable version of the Open Responsible AI Model license.
Language Decision Transformers with Exponential Tilt for Interactive Text Environments
Gontier, Nicolas, Rodriguez, Pau, Laradji, Issam, Vazquez, David, Pal, Christopher
Text-based game environments are challenging because agents must deal with long sequences of text, execute compositional actions using text and learn from sparse rewards. We address these challenges by proposing Language Decision Transformers (LDTs), a framework that is based on transformer language models and decision transformers (DTs). Our LDTs extend DTs with 3 components: (1) exponential tilt to guide the agent towards high obtainable goals, (2) novel goal conditioning methods yielding better results than the traditional return-to-go (sum of all future rewards), and (3) a model of future observations that improves agent performance. LDTs are the first to address offline RL with DTs on these challenging games. Our experiments show that LDTs achieve the highest scores among many different types of agents on some of the most challenging Jericho games, such as Enchanter.
Measuring Systematic Generalization in Neural Proof Generation with Transformers
Gontier, Nicolas, Sinha, Koustuv, Reddy, Siva, Pal, Christopher
We are interested in understanding how well Transformer language models (TLMs) can perform reasoning tasks when trained on knowledge encoded in the form of natural language. We investigate their systematic generalization abilities on a logical reasoning task in natural language, which involves reasoning over relationships between entities grounded in first-order logical proofs. Specifically, we perform soft theorem-proving by leveraging TLMs to generate natural language proofs. We test the generated proofs for logical consistency, along with the accuracy of the final inference. We observe length-generalization issues when evaluated on longer-than-trained sequences. However, we observe TLMs improve their generalization performance after being exposed to longer, exhaustive proofs. In addition, we discover that TLMs are able to generalize better using backward-chaining proofs compared to their forward-chaining counterparts, while they find it easier to generate forward chaining proofs. We observe that models that are not trained to generate proofs are better at generalizing to problems based on longer proofs. This suggests that Transformers have efficient internal reasoning strategies that are harder to interpret. These results highlight the systematic generalization behavior of TLMs in the context of logical reasoning, and we believe this work motivates deeper inspection of their underlying reasoning strategies.