Delay Embedding Theory of Neural Sequence Models
This work connects dynamical systems theory to deep learning sequence models, offering insights for improving model efficiency in tasks like language processing.
The paper investigated whether language models can reconstruct unobserved dynamics using delay embedding theory from dynamical systems, finding that state-space models outperform transformers in parameter efficiency and error reduction on dynamics tasks.
To generate coherent responses, language models infer unobserved meaning from their input text sequence. One potential explanation for this capability arises from theories of delay embeddings in dynamical systems, which prove that unobserved variables can be recovered from the history of only a handful of observed variables. To test whether language models are effectively constructing delay embeddings, we measure the capacities of sequence models to reconstruct unobserved dynamics. We trained 1-layer transformer decoders and state-space sequence models on next-step prediction from noisy, partially-observed time series data. We found that each sequence layer can learn a viable embedding of the underlying system. However, state-space models have a stronger inductive bias than transformers-in particular, they more effectively reconstruct unobserved information at initialization, leading to more parameter-efficient models and lower error on dynamics tasks. Our work thus forges a novel connection between dynamical systems and deep learning sequence models via delay embedding theory.