LGOct 25, 2022

Same Pre-training Loss, Better Downstream: Implicit Bias Matters for Language Models

Stanford
arXiv:2210.14199v186 citationsh-index: 29
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This challenges conventional evaluation metrics for language models, potentially improving model selection and training for downstream tasks.

The paper shows that pre-training loss does not fully explain downstream performance in language models, and identifies flatness of the model as a better correlate, demonstrating through experiments that models with the same minimal pre-training loss can have different downstream performance due to implicit bias.

Language modeling on large-scale datasets leads to impressive performance gains on various downstream language tasks. The validation pre-training loss (or perplexity in autoregressive language modeling) is often used as the evaluation metric when developing language models since the pre-training loss tends to be well-correlated with downstream performance (which is itself difficult to evaluate comprehensively). Contrary to this conventional wisdom, this paper shows that 1) pre-training loss cannot fully explain downstream performance and 2) flatness of the model is well-correlated with downstream performance where pre-training loss is not. On simplified datasets, we identify three ways to produce models with the same (statistically optimal) pre-training loss but different downstream performance: continue pre-training after convergence, increasing the model size, and changing the training algorithm. These experiments demonstrate the existence of implicit bias of pre-training algorithms/optimizers -- among models with the same minimal pre-training loss, they implicitly prefer more transferable ones. Toward understanding this implicit bias, we prove that SGD with standard mini-batch noise implicitly prefers flatter minima in language models, and empirically observe a strong correlation between flatness and downstream performance among models with the same minimal pre-training loss. We also prove in a synthetic language setting that among the models with the minimal pre-training loss, the flattest model transfers to downstream tasks.

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