We investigate the use of randomly generated data for the sake of pre-training a model. We justify this approach theoretically from the perspective of algorithmic complexity, building on recent research that shows that sequence models can be trained to approximate Solomonoff induction. We derive similar, but complementary theoretical results. We show empirically that synthetically generated data can be used to pre-train a model before the data is seen. We replicate earlier results that models trained this way show zero-shot in-context learning across a variety of datasets, and that this performance improves with scale. We extend earlier results to real-world data, and show that finetuning a model after pre-training offers faster convergence and better generalization.
Universal pre-training by iterated random computation
Randomly generated data can be used to pre-train models, enabling zero-shot in-context learning and improved generalization when fine-tuned on real-world data.
- Year
- 2025
- Venue
- arXiv 2025
- Authors
- 1
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2506.20057ARXIV-DEFAULT
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