This repository contains code and tools associated with the Language models can explain neurons in language models paper, specifically:
- Code for automatically generating, simulating, and scoring explanations of neuron behavior using the methodology described in the paper. See the neuron-explainer README for more information.
Note: if you run into errors of the form "Error: Could not find any credentials that grant access to storage account: 'openaipublic' and container: 'neuron-explainer'"." you might be able to fix this by signing up for an azure account and specifying the credentials as described in the error message.
- A tool for viewing neuron activations and explanations, accessible here. See the neuron-viewer README for more information.
Together with this code, we're also releasing public datasets of GPT-2 XL neurons and explanations. Here's an overview of those datasets.
- Neuron activations:
az://openaipublic/neuron-explainer/data/collated-activations/{layer_index}/{neuron_index}.json
- Tokenized text sequences and their activations for the neuron. We provide multiple sets of tokens and activations: top-activating ones, random samples from several quantiles; and a completely random sample. We also provide some basic statistics for the activations.
- Each file contains a JSON-formatted
NeuronRecord
dataclass.
- Neuron explanations:
az://openaipublic/neuron-explainer/data/explanations/{layer_index}/{neuron_index}.jsonl
- Scored model-generated explanations of the behavior of the neuron, including simulation results.
- Each file contains a JSON-formatted
NeuronSimulationResults
dataclass.
- Related neurons:
az://openaipublic/neuron-explainer/data/related-neurons/weight-based/{layer_index}/{neuron_index}.json
- Lists of the upstream and downstream neurons with the most positive and negative connections (see below for definition).
- Each file contains a JSON-formatted dataclass whose definition is not included in this repo.
- Tokens with high average activations:
az://openaipublic/neuron-explainer/data/related-tokens/activation-based/{layer_index}/{neuron_index}.json
- Lists of tokens with the highest average activations for individual neurons, and their average activations.
- Each file contains a JSON-formatted
TokenLookupTableSummaryOfNeuron
dataclass.
- Tokens with large inbound and outbound weights:
az://openaipublic/neuron-explainer/data/related-tokens/weight-based/{layer_index}/{neuron_index}.json
- List of the most-positive and most-negative input and output tokens for individual neurons, as well as the associated weight (see below for definition).
- Each file contains a JSON-formatted
WeightBasedSummaryOfNeuron
dataclass.
Update (July 5, 2023) We also released a set of explanations for GPT-2 Small. The methodology is slightly different from the methodology used for GPT-2 XL so the results aren't directly comparable.
- Neuron activations:
az://openaipublic/neuron-explainer/gpt2_small_data/collated-activations/{layer_index}/{neuron_index}.json
- Neuron explanations:
az://openaipublic/neuron-explainer/gpt2_small_data/explanations/{layer_index}/{neuron_index}.jsonl
Refer to GPT-2 model code for understanding of model weight conventions.
Neuron-neuron: For two neurons (l1, n1)
and (l2, n2)
with l1 < l2
, the connection strength is defined as
h{l1}.mlp.c_proj.w[:, n1, :] @ diag(h{l2}.ln_2.g) @ h{l2}.mlp.c_fc.w[:, :, n2]
.
Neuron-token: For token t
and neuron (l, n)
, the input weight is computed as
wte[t, :] @ diag(h{l}.ln_2.g) @ h{l}.mlp.c_fc.w[:, :, n]
and the output weight is computed as
h{l}.mlp.c_proj.w[:, n, :] @ diag(ln_f.g) @ wte[t, :]
.
Lists of neurons we thought were interesting according to different criteria, with some preliminary descriptions.