CLAIFeb 6

The Representational Geometry of Number

arXiv:2602.06843v11 citationsh-index: 1
Originality Highly original
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This provides a mechanistic account for cognitive science on how shared and divergent representations coexist, using number concepts as a testbed.

The paper tackled the problem of how conceptual representations balance shared structure and task-specific flexibility, showing that number representations in language models preserve stable relational geometry across tasks, with subspaces transformable via linear mappings.

A central question in cognitive science is whether conceptual representations converge onto a shared manifold to support generalization, or diverge into orthogonal subspaces to minimize task interference. While prior work has discovered evidence for both, a mechanistic account of how these properties coexist and transform across tasks remains elusive. We propose that representational sharing lies not in the concepts themselves, but in the geometric relations between them. Using number concepts as a testbed and language models as high-dimensional computational substrates, we show that number representations preserve a stable relational structure across tasks. Task-specific representations are embedded in distinct subspaces, with low-level features like magnitude and parity encoded along separable linear directions. Crucially, we find that these subspaces are largely transformable into one another via linear mappings, indicating that representations share relational structure despite being located in distinct subspaces. Together, these results provide a mechanistic lens of how language models balance the shared structure of number representation with functional flexibility. It suggests that understanding arises when task-specific transformations are applied to a shared underlying relational structure of conceptual representations.

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