LGAIJul 17, 2025

Change of Thought: Adaptive Test-Time Computation

arXiv:2507.13569v1h-index: 8
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of limited expressive power in encoder Transformers for machine learning practitioners, offering a novel adaptive method that is incremental in enhancing existing architectures.

The paper tackled the limitation of fixed-depth Transformers by introducing the SELF-Transformer, which iteratively refines attention weights internally to adapt computation based on input difficulty, achieving up to 20% accuracy gains on encoder benchmarks without adding parameters.

Transformers evaluated in a single, fixed-depth pass are provably limited in expressive power to the constant-depth circuit class TC0. Running a Transformer autoregressively removes that ceiling -- first in next-token prediction and, more recently, in chain-of-thought reasoning. Both regimes rely on feedback loops that decode internal states into tokens only to re-encode them in subsequent steps. While this "thinking aloud" mirrors human reasoning, biological brains iterate without externalising intermediate states as language. To boost the expressive power of encoder Transformers without resorting to token-level autoregression, we introduce the SELF-Transformer: an encoder layer that iteratively refines its own attention weights to a fixed point. Instead of producing -- in one pass -- the alignment matrix that remixes the input sequence, the SELF-Transformer iteratively updates that matrix internally, scaling test-time computation with input difficulty. This adaptivity yields up to 20\% accuracy gains on encoder-style benchmarks without increasing parameter count, demonstrating that input-adaptive alignment at test time offers substantial benefits for only a modest extra compute budget. Self-Transformers thus recover much of the expressive power of iterative reasoning while preserving the simplicity of pure encoder architectures.

Foundations

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