CLAIMar 3, 2025

How Well do LLMs Compress Their Own Chain-of-Thought? A Token Complexity Approach

arXiv:2503.01141v288 citationsh-index: 3
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses efficiency concerns in LLM reasoning for researchers and practitioners, offering a benchmark for evaluating compression strategies, though it is incremental in analyzing existing methods.

The study systematically examines how compressing chain-of-thought reasoning affects large language model performance, revealing a universal tradeoff between reasoning length and accuracy, with each task having an intrinsic 'token complexity' that sets information-theoretic limits on compression.

Chain-of-thought prompting has emerged as a powerful technique for enabling large language models (LLMs) to solve complex reasoning tasks. However, these reasoning chains can be verbose, raising concerns about efficiency. In response, recent works have sought to decrease response lengths through simple prompting strategies (e.g. 'be concise'). In this work, we conduct the first systematic study of the relationship between reasoning length and model performance across a diverse range of compression instructions (e.g. 'use 10 words or less' or 'remove all punctuation'). In doing so, we discover a universal tradeoff between reasoning length and accuracy that persists across even very distinct reasoning chains. We demonstrate that this tradeoff emerges from a sharp threshold behavior at the question level: each task has an intrinsic 'token complexity' - a minimal number of tokens required for successful problem-solving. We show how token complexity enables us to compute information-theoretic limits on the accuracy-compression tradeoff, and find that prompt-based compression strategies operate far from these theoretical limits. This suggests there may be significant room for improvement and our framework provides a benchmark to help researchers evaluate progress in reasoning efficiency. Our work also highlights the importance of adaptive compression -- giving shorter responses for easier questions -- and we show that token complexity is a useful tool for measuring this capability.

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