Not sure if I buy it. First, SVD decomposition to obtain U, Σ, V is computationally expensive, so it would work only if we are not finetuning very big models.
But my real concern comes at the results. The "13 parameters" looks like bait, because it is one result of finetuning a model on a very simple math benchmark, grade-school-math (GSM8K), an already very saturated benchmark on every model. Besides, it seems to happen only for the qwen family model... It looks like GSM8K was part of the training set of the qwen model, and this tinylora finetuning did the last adjustments to perfectly reflect that overtraining.
Fair points, especially on GSM8K saturation and Qwen possibly already sitting close to the solution. That said, even if this is mostly "last-mile alignment", the fact that it can be done with such a tiny signal is still interesting, it suggests the gap between capability and behavior might be much smaller (and cheaper to bridge) than we assume.
>One theory is that the knowledge required to solve the task is already stored in the parameters of the model, and only the style has to change for task success
>In particular, learning to generate longer outputs may be possible in few parameters
>we develop budget forcing to control test-time compute by forcefully terminating the model’s thinking process or lengthening it by appending “Wait” multiple times to the model’s generation when it tries to end. This can lead the model to double-check its answer, often fixing incorrect reasoning steps
Maybe, indeed, the model simply learns to insert the EOS token (or similar) later, and the capability is already in the base model
If 13 parameters can unlock better reasoning, then we will not be "training" models, we'll be steering them. Most of the capability is already there.
The real unlock isn’t TinyLoRA, it’s what this implies: ultra-cheap, continuous adaptation. The bottleneck shifts from compute to having a good reward signal.
After a quick content browse, my understanding is this is more like with a very compressed diff vector, applied to a multi billion parameter model, the models could be 'retrained' to reason (score) better on a specific topic , e.g. math was used in the paper
I agree, I don't think gradient descent is going to work in the long run for the kind of luxurious & automated communist utopia the technocrats are promising everyone.
Such low dimensionality of the LoRA vector must surely result in a close-to-linear modification to the KV calculation. This seems to me to imply that what we call "reasoning" is latent within the model. Pretty clear I didn't read the paper, I'm sure the authors address this.
Yes - some degree of reasoning appears to be latent in the structure of language itself. But models trained explicitly on reasoning-focused data still perform better than models trained only on general corpora.*
*At least up to 300B parameters, based on the models we’ve tested.
Not sure if I buy it. First, SVD decomposition to obtain U, Σ, V is computationally expensive, so it would work only if we are not finetuning very big models.
But my real concern comes at the results. The "13 parameters" looks like bait, because it is one result of finetuning a model on a very simple math benchmark, grade-school-math (GSM8K), an already very saturated benchmark on every model. Besides, it seems to happen only for the qwen family model... It looks like GSM8K was part of the training set of the qwen model, and this tinylora finetuning did the last adjustments to perfectly reflect that overtraining.
Fair points, especially on GSM8K saturation and Qwen possibly already sitting close to the solution. That said, even if this is mostly "last-mile alignment", the fact that it can be done with such a tiny signal is still interesting, it suggests the gap between capability and behavior might be much smaller (and cheaper to bridge) than we assume.
Yeah, my big problem with the paper is it just might be an artifact of qwen's training process.
>One theory is that the knowledge required to solve the task is already stored in the parameters of the model, and only the style has to change for task success
>In particular, learning to generate longer outputs may be possible in few parameters
Reminded me of: https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.19393
>we develop budget forcing to control test-time compute by forcefully terminating the model’s thinking process or lengthening it by appending “Wait” multiple times to the model’s generation when it tries to end. This can lead the model to double-check its answer, often fixing incorrect reasoning steps
Maybe, indeed, the model simply learns to insert the EOS token (or similar) later, and the capability is already in the base model
If i understand it correctly, the analogy could be:
Let's say we have a low level programmer expert and we try to teach him algebra either we:
If 13 parameters can unlock better reasoning, then we will not be "training" models, we'll be steering them. Most of the capability is already there.
The real unlock isn’t TinyLoRA, it’s what this implies: ultra-cheap, continuous adaptation. The bottleneck shifts from compute to having a good reward signal.
Is it an Aprils Fools publication?
The quality of custom models trained with proper reasoning datasets[0] even with small parameters (3-7B is sweet spot) is incredible now
[0]: cartesien.io or Salesforce's WebscaleRL
What are you basing how good they are on? Personal experience or some benchmarks?
Benchmarks, we have internal ones testing reasoning fine-tuned v/s frontier + prompts
For some use cases it can be parity performance at 1/20th the cost up to exceeds at 1/10th the cost. Trade-off is ofc narrow applicability
With four parameters I can fit an elephant, and with five I can make him wiggle his trunk so there is still room for improvement.
Except learning to reason is a far cry from curve fitting. Our brains have more than five parameters.
After a quick content browse, my understanding is this is more like with a very compressed diff vector, applied to a multi billion parameter model, the models could be 'retrained' to reason (score) better on a specific topic , e.g. math was used in the paper
It's the statistics equivalent of 'no one needs more than 640kb of RAM'
speak for yourself!
reasoning capability might just be some specific combinations of mirror neurons.
even some advanced math usually evolves applying patterns found elsewhere into new topics
I agree, I don't think gradient descent is going to work in the long run for the kind of luxurious & automated communist utopia the technocrats are promising everyone.
Such low dimensionality of the LoRA vector must surely result in a close-to-linear modification to the KV calculation. This seems to me to imply that what we call "reasoning" is latent within the model. Pretty clear I didn't read the paper, I'm sure the authors address this.
Yes - some degree of reasoning appears to be latent in the structure of language itself. But models trained explicitly on reasoning-focused data still perform better than models trained only on general corpora.*
*At least up to 300B parameters, based on the models we’ve tested.