We present MIPS, a novel method for program synthesis based on automated mechanistic interpretability of neural networks trained to perform the desired task, auto-distilling the learned algorithm into Python code. We test MIPS on a benchmark of 62 algorithmic tasks that can be learned by an RNN and find it highly complementary to GPT-4: MIPS solves 32 of them, including 13 that are not solved by GPT-4 (which also solves 30). MIPS uses an integer autoencoder to convert the RNN into a finite state machine, then applies Boolean or integer symbolic regression to capture the learned algorithm. As opposed to large language models, this program synthesis technique makes no use of (and is therefore not limited by) human training data such as algorithms and code from GitHub. We discuss opportunities and challenges for scaling up this approach to make machine-learned models more interpretable and trustworthy.
Opening the AI black box: program synthesis via mechanistic interpretability
MIPS, a method for converting neural networks into interpretable code using an integer autoencoder and symbolic regression, complements GPT-4 by solving a set of algorithmic tasks without reliance on human training data.
- Year
- 2024
- Venue
- arXiv 2024
- Authors
- 10
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2402.05110ARXIV-DEFAULT
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