CLFeb 12

Detecting Overflow in Compressed Token Representations for Retrieval-Augmented Generation

arXiv:2602.12235v2h-index: 2
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of efficient long-context processing for LLMs in resource-constrained environments, though it is incremental as it builds on existing soft compression methods.

The paper tackled the problem of detecting when compressed token representations in retrieval-augmented generation lose task-relevant content, finding that lightweight probing classifiers incorporating query information achieved 0.72 AUC-ROC on average across datasets.

Efficient long-context processing remains a crucial challenge for contemporary large language models (LLMs), especially in resource-constrained environments. Soft compression architectures promise to extend effective context length by replacing long token sequences with smaller sets of learned compressed tokens. Yet, the limits of compressibility -- and when compression begins to erase task-relevant content -- remain underexplored. In this paper, we define token overflow as a regime in which compressed representations no longer contain sufficient information to answer a given query, and propose a methodology to characterize and detect it. In the xRAG soft-compression setting, we find that query-agnostic saturation statistics reliably separate compressed from uncompressed token representations, providing a practical tool for identifying compressed tokens but showing limited overflow detection capability. Lightweight probing classifiers over both query and context xRAG representations detect overflow with 0.72 AUC-ROC on average on HotpotQA, SQuADv2, and TriviaQA datasets, demonstrating that incorporating query information improves detection performance. These results advance from query-independent diagnostics to query-aware detectors, enabling low-cost pre-LLM gating to mitigate compression-induced errors.

Foundations

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