AIJan 30

The Hot Mess of AI: How Does Misalignment Scale With Model Intelligence and Task Complexity?

Anthropic
arXiv:2601.23045v16 citationsh-index: 63
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses safety concerns for deploying advanced AI in high-stakes applications, though it is incremental in building on existing bias-variance frameworks.

The study investigates how AI model failures become more incoherent with increased reasoning steps and task complexity, finding that larger models often exhibit greater incoherence, suggesting failures may be unpredictable rather than systematically misaligned.

As AI becomes more capable, we entrust it with more general and consequential tasks. The risks from failure grow more severe with increasing task scope. It is therefore important to understand how extremely capable AI models will fail: Will they fail by systematically pursuing goals we do not intend? Or will they fail by being a hot mess, and taking nonsensical actions that do not further any goal? We operationalize this question using a bias-variance decomposition of the errors made by AI models: An AI's \emph{incoherence} on a task is measured over test-time randomness as the fraction of its error that stems from variance rather than bias in task outcome. Across all tasks and frontier models we measure, the longer models spend reasoning and taking actions, \emph{the more incoherent} their failures become. Incoherence changes with model scale in a way that is experiment dependent. However, in several settings, larger, more capable models are more incoherent than smaller models. Consequently, scale alone seems unlikely to eliminate incoherence. Instead, as more capable AIs pursue harder tasks, requiring more sequential action and thought, our results predict failures to be accompanied by more incoherent behavior. This suggests a future where AIs sometimes cause industrial accidents (due to unpredictable misbehavior), but are less likely to exhibit consistent pursuit of a misaligned goal. This increases the relative importance of alignment research targeting reward hacking or goal misspecification.

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