LGAIMay 21, 2022

Scaling Laws and Interpretability of Learning from Repeated Data

OpenAI
arXiv:2205.10487v1161 citationsh-index: 31
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a critical issue for AI researchers and practitioners in optimizing training data quality and model efficiency, though it is incremental as it builds on prior observations of negative effects from data repetition.

The paper systematically studies the effects of repeated data in large language model training, finding that repeating a small fraction of data (e.g., 0.1% repeated 100 times) can degrade performance severely, such as reducing an 800M parameter model to the level of a 400M parameter model, due to a double descent phenomenon and damage to generalization structures like induction heads.

Recent large language models have been trained on vast datasets, but also often on repeated data, either intentionally for the purpose of upweighting higher quality data, or unintentionally because data deduplication is not perfect and the model is exposed to repeated data at the sentence, paragraph, or document level. Some works have reported substantial negative performance effects of this repeated data. In this paper we attempt to study repeated data systematically and to understand its effects mechanistically. To do this, we train a family of models where most of the data is unique but a small fraction of it is repeated many times. We find a strong double descent phenomenon, in which repeated data can lead test loss to increase midway through training. A predictable range of repetition frequency leads to surprisingly severe degradation in performance. For instance, performance of an 800M parameter model can be degraded to that of a 2x smaller model (400M params) by repeating 0.1% of the data 100 times, despite the other 90% of the training tokens remaining unique. We suspect there is a range in the middle where the data can be memorized and doing so consumes a large fraction of the model's capacity, and this may be where the peak of degradation occurs. Finally, we connect these observations to recent mechanistic interpretability work - attempting to reverse engineer the detailed computations performed by the model - by showing that data repetition disproportionately damages copying and internal structures associated with generalization, such as induction heads, providing a possible mechanism for the shift from generalization to memorization. Taken together, these results provide a hypothesis for why repeating a relatively small fraction of data in large language models could lead to disproportionately large harms to performance.

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