CLAIMar 8, 2024

Gemini 1.5: Unlocking multimodal understanding across millions of tokens of context

DeepMindMILA
arXiv:2403.05530v53657 citationsh-index: 102
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of long-context multimodal understanding for AI applications, representing a significant leap over existing models but is incremental as an update to previous Gemini versions.

The paper introduces the Gemini 1.5 family of multimodal models, which tackle the problem of understanding and reasoning over long-context information across millions of tokens, achieving near-perfect recall (>99%) up to 10M tokens and enabling real-world applications like 26-75% time savings in professional tasks.

In this report, we introduce the Gemini 1.5 family of models, representing the next generation of highly compute-efficient multimodal models capable of recalling and reasoning over fine-grained information from millions of tokens of context, including multiple long documents and hours of video and audio. The family includes two new models: (1) an updated Gemini 1.5 Pro, which exceeds the February version on the great majority of capabilities and benchmarks; (2) Gemini 1.5 Flash, a more lightweight variant designed for efficiency with minimal regression in quality. Gemini 1.5 models achieve near-perfect recall on long-context retrieval tasks across modalities, improve the state-of-the-art in long-document QA, long-video QA and long-context ASR, and match or surpass Gemini 1.0 Ultra's state-of-the-art performance across a broad set of benchmarks. Studying the limits of Gemini 1.5's long-context ability, we find continued improvement in next-token prediction and near-perfect retrieval (>99%) up to at least 10M tokens, a generational leap over existing models such as Claude 3.0 (200k) and GPT-4 Turbo (128k). Finally, we highlight real-world use cases, such as Gemini 1.5 collaborating with professionals on completing their tasks achieving 26 to 75% time savings across 10 different job categories, as well as surprising new capabilities of large language models at the frontier; when given a grammar manual for Kalamang, a language with fewer than 200 speakers worldwide, the model learns to translate English to Kalamang at a similar level to a person who learned from the same content.

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Foundations

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