This is What Limits Current LLMs

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  • Опубликовано: 27 май 2024
  • Recent advances in large language models (LLMs) have centered around more data, larger models, and larger context lengths. The ability of LLMs to learn in-context (i.e. in-context learning) makes longer context lengths extremely valuable. However, there are some problems with relying on just in-context learning to learn during inference.
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Комментарии • 193

  • @mynameisawesomeman
    @mynameisawesomeman 12 дней назад +118

    The points you bring up about the failures of RAG and incontext learning are more broadly problematic. I've frequently wondered why LLMs fail to be able to "synthesize" information from different sources. Try to get an LLM to debate you on a topic. it's completely futile because the LLM just regurgitates information from its training data (with all its associated biases). It doesn't do any reading between the lines, by taking disparate sources of information and having that "Eurika" moment when two, at first, disconnected ideas come together to introduce new knowledge. In essence, LLMs are still just context dependent pattern recognition machines.

    • @plaintext7288
      @plaintext7288 6 дней назад +10

      AI, as a whole is glorofied statistica

    • @rnoro
      @rnoro 4 дня назад

      @@plaintext7288 This is the most concise and precise comment on AI I've ever seen!

    • @sino_diogenes
      @sino_diogenes 3 дня назад

      @@rnoro It's also total bullshit. The "AI are just schochastic parrots", "AI is just predicting the next word", and so on have been thoroughly debunked.

    • @Digga005
      @Digga005 День назад

      @@sino_diogenes I'm not doubting you, but can you provide sources for that? It'd be interesting to read the arguments behind that

    • @spiralsun1
      @spiralsun1 12 часов назад

      EXACTLY ❤ I TRIED ARGUING. 😮 Not good. The censorship can never work for the same reasons. Look at the Captain Underpants kids book series. Literally would be “burned” by the censors in text and images. But it’s the opposite of child abuse.

  • @li_tsz_fung
    @li_tsz_fung 23 дня назад +122

    After you first brought up continual learning versus long context / RAG, I immediately think of the example of just asking for advice from customer service staff with a manual, versus asking a technician. RAG is like a CS person that could quickly find the page related to your question. In context seems a bit better, the person had read the manual and probably can bring you a bit insight, depends on how smart that person is.
    But continual learning, ideally means the manual is fully understood by the person. They learnt it, instead of remembering it. Ideally, depends on how good a learner they are.

  • @broyojo
    @broyojo 24 дня назад +131

    do you see degradation of the model as you are doing continual learning, maybe some catastrophic forgetting?

    • @erwile
      @erwile 23 дня назад +26

      You have to distill the new data with the old one so that it doesn't regress (according to an exTesla ai lead)

    • @justinlloyd3
      @justinlloyd3 22 дня назад +6

      I've found a way to prevent catastrophic forgetting using attractors.

    • @Nellak2011
      @Nellak2011 20 дней назад +53

      I seem to have catastrophic forgetting with my continual learning, however, I noticed it only happens during exam time.

    • @sir_no_name1478
      @sir_no_name1478 20 дней назад

      Same here xD

    • @redthunder6183
      @redthunder6183 18 дней назад +3

      @@justinlloyd3what are attractors?

  • @natecodesai
    @natecodesai 24 дня назад +75

    I paused. From my experience working in production with RAG... simply it's like using a legacy technology to fill in the blanks in training. Attention mechanisms are way more subtle and nuanced than semantic search lookup.... if there was a cheap way to viably do continual learning in a production environment, and still allow context windows, etc. it would solve the whole problem of semantic search not being enough to find the right data you really need.

    • @genegray9895
      @genegray9895 24 дня назад +5

      LoRA and other PEFT techniques are rather cheap, and even full CL is only about 3x more compute and memory intensive than standard inference costs.

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад +8

      That is the goal!

    • @JEEVRAJTARALKAR
      @JEEVRAJTARALKAR 20 дней назад +1

      Why can't we update context documents, which is an input for RAG for continuous learning?
      Means every time we want model to learn new knowledge, just update the patch, which RAG model uses as a context

    • @themartdog
      @themartdog 18 дней назад +4

      I agree, RAG feels very empty to me. Like, once you intelligently find the relevent text for a prompt in your vector db, it seems like the LLM isn't really even needed anymore. Why not just use the vector search and ranking by itself at that point? To me, the value of the LLM is its ability to create new content, and RAG basically puts the LLM in a tiny box.

    • @KyleCBowman
      @KyleCBowman 17 дней назад

      This is also my thinking
      If you can find the right documents anyway, that means the documents (and the answer) already exists and you don't need the LLM to read it and essentially play it back to you.
      IF you can find the right documents that is.
      Therefore we either focus on finding the right documents or we continually train the LLMs -> how are you doing that?

  • @Laszer271
    @Laszer271 23 дня назад +74

    I am not convinced by your arguments. In my work, I often need to tell business people that we should not do training or fine-tuning until we see that in-context learning is not enough. And in the end, it turns out that in-context learning is enough, even for those complicated examples you described.
    Let me argue with your arguments.
    1. `Where does the context come from?` - Well, if we have no context then any training is even more out of the question than in-context learning, right? I don't see how that would be an argument for continual learning.
    1.1 `RAG won't enable our models to solve complicated or niche problems` - It can. If LLM is capable enough and has great general knowledge then it can often solve problems that no human has ever solved before, just using its general knowledge and some additional context about the problem that needs solving.
    2. `The scope of in-context learning is limited by pertaining data` - agreed. However, the most capable models are trained on almost every type of data you can imagine. That means that you probably won't find a problem for which in-context learning won't work for those models. This can however be a problem if you are working with less capable, smaller models.
    For me the biggest problem of RAGs is that models do not work well with very large contexts. Even if you have 128k context length in gpt4, it won't be able to reason well with 100k tokens of table data or system logs or even a codebase. Instead, it will often "misread" or "forget" information in such a long context. That's more of a limitation of current LLMs, I think, not an intrinsic characteristic of RAG systems.

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад +27

      These are some great points, and there is a large hole in my video because I left out half of the argument for brevity.
      The most crucial point I think is the question of where the context comes from, because of course, you aren't going to get any benefits of continual learning if you have nothing to learn from 😛
      The answer to this is having RL agents generate their own data via experience. The thing about this approach is that it requires you to continually get new data that is more related to what you want to solve. But if you aren't continually learning, you won't be able to generate continually more relevant data (unless it happens to fit into your context window).
      For smaller problems this is often not a problem, but what if you want to learn an entirely new programming language or learn calculus? You can't just give a bit of context; you have to learn from a continually changing curriculum as you learn one topic after the other. That is where this approach makes sense.
      This is why I agree with you to an extent on point 1.1. If there is a problem just on the boundary of what humans haven't done before, RAG + in-context learning can potentially solve it. But if you want to build on that new knowledge, and then build on that, and build on that, and so on, that is where you need continual learning, and these are the types of problems that researchers and startups often face. They are problems that require layers of learning.
      That being said, I disagree with point 2. There are sooo many things these agent are not trained on, but they do require you going deep into specific domains most of the time.
      The long context is one problem I was originally going to bring up in the video, but I decided against it because models will keep getting better at dealing with longer context as training methods and architectures improve. These other problems will not go away.
      I appreciate the well thought out critique

    • @TheStickofWar
      @TheStickofWar 19 дней назад +1

      I want to know how you arrived at 1.1, do we have any proof or examples? I’m not convinced, just by nature of what it means to understand something.

    • @redthunder6183
      @redthunder6183 18 дней назад +1

      @@EdanMeyeragreed, I also would like to bring up the point that context size brings O(n^2) scaling. So with a massive context window, you will eventually hit a point where training becomes just as cheap as a few forward passes.
      Also even with a nearly unlimited, yet finite, context size, you will eventually run out of room for very specific tasks like working with a code base long term. Then training on that knowledge becomes a very viable option because it would essentially reset the ctx window size.
      Also LLMs perform worse on larger contexts windows, and that is just a given, they will always perform worse with larger windows of info because humans also have the same flaw, and LLMs are trained to mimic human writing, so having a smaller window will always yield better performance

    • @elon6131
      @elon6131 День назад

      @@redthunder6183r.e. Context window size, SotA can find specific datapoints with near 100% accuracy in 1M+ context window.

  • @woolfel
    @woolfel 18 дней назад +8

    lets be honest, documentation generally sucks. I'm an open source contributor and the biggest issue users report is "your docs suck". RAG doesn't solve out-of-distribution situations, so it's not a magic bullet. Even when developers try to write good docs, it quickly becomes out of date and wrong. until we have better architectures, continuous training will be needed.

  • @jaysmooveV2
    @jaysmooveV2 24 дня назад +7

    My guess on why continual is that if pulled in an economically efficient manner it can allow researchers who are on the bleeding edge of the ML field to harness the copilot like assistance when working on completely new tasks because often times when doing your own research you often have to answer all the questions on your own and to have a second brain their with you that has all the same context on the research as you do will be very beneficial

  • @DanLyndon
    @DanLyndon 9 дней назад +2

    The poetry example has a hidden layer to it. It does not matter whether an AI is trained on high quality poetry. It cannot create high quality poetry, because this requires a completely different kind of intelligence than mere pattern recognition of things that have already been written.

  • @Crybyte
    @Crybyte 24 дня назад +28

    2:30 - I'm thinking that the reason you continuously train models in production instead of using RAG is because deciding what information is relevant is unclear. By continuously training models, the model is able to make those connections itself. I'm wondering if this also reduces inference speed, as the prompt no longer has so much extra padding.

    • @yxzwayne
      @yxzwayne 23 дня назад +2

      precisely, fine-tuning will never leave our scope because it's far from optimal to keep models static.

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад +2

      Yup, this is a huge part of it

    • @JoeyJooste
      @JoeyJooste 17 дней назад +1

      You can use the llm to decide what information is relevant, by adding an extra call to the database. For example the llm can output 75 keywords that request the context needed. Then that gets sent to the llm again, allowing for nearly 100% correct context. Along with the possibility of the LLM being allowed to make 5-10 context calls back to the database. You overcome these issues.

  • @roomo7time
    @roomo7time 24 дня назад +6

    The main reason we dont do CL is nbecause there is nothing in old fashioned CL that actually works.
    Currently the only thing that learns from the previous and improves is in context learning.
    Yes we need continual learning but it should be by making incontext learning lighter.
    More fundamentally, we need to separate between memory based incontext continual learning and parameter continual learning.
    The former is to add up event based knowledge while the latter is to add up intrincsic reasoning capabilities. The former should be based on external memory while the latter is on the parameter level. Right now we have the former in the name of incontext learning using token memory.
    The community is already doing research along this direction although not in the name of CL.

    • @augustecomte7980
      @augustecomte7980 21 день назад

      What keywords are being used instead of Continuous learning ? Can you share please ?

    • @roomo7time
      @roomo7time 13 дней назад

      ​@@augustecomte7980i dont think there is a particular name for it. And i think there is no framework yet for parameter-level continual learning in a strict sense, where a model can add up its reasoning capabilities by additional training solely on new incoming data. I do not know much in industry but a latest paper to this direction is I think iterative reasoning preference optimization. But it requires all data not just new one

  • @nsambataufeeq1748
    @nsambataufeeq1748 5 дней назад +1

    Sparse training data in highly specific problems is always going to be a problem. Its basically where hallucinations come from.

  • @JEEVRAJTARALKAR
    @JEEVRAJTARALKAR 20 дней назад +9

    I have created an algorithm for continous learning model, which can help software developers keep track of problems solved. But implementation needs more brains, so going slow till I am alone. I wasn't aware someone else is thinking on same lines. Thanks for the video

    • @palmberry5576
      @palmberry5576 8 дней назад +1

      I was really expecting you to say “but I can’t fit it in the margins”

  • @ImtihanAhmed
    @ImtihanAhmed 7 дней назад +1

    Great explanation about the limitations of current LLMs. I worked with RAG systems recently and it works...for very specific limited knowledge retrieval type applications. We are still so far away from these systems being generally useful. There's probably a lot more you can do with MoE now that a lot more effort is being put into making models smaller.

  • @simonstrandgaard5503
    @simonstrandgaard5503 19 дней назад

    Beautiful drawings. Erasing the drawing, that is a nice transition. Great presentation.

  • @sitrakaforler8696
    @sitrakaforler8696 23 дня назад +1

    Interesting indeed !
    Good luck with your start up !

  • @danielwiczew
    @danielwiczew 19 дней назад

    I was working on LLMs from about 2018. In context learning was the first thing that the LLMs were good on

  • @benjamin6729
    @benjamin6729 6 дней назад

    This was a really interesting video for me doing research on LLMs. Thanks. Have subscribed

  • @yassinesafraoui
    @yassinesafraoui 24 дня назад +37

    I think privacy of users can be a real problem if continual learning is not done carefully

    • @li_tsz_fung
      @li_tsz_fung 23 дня назад +12

      Quality of the model also can degrade. More learning not necessarily means better

    • @galewallblanco8184
      @galewallblanco8184 22 дня назад

      @@li_tsz_fung that depends on the training method and optimizer plus if it starts to overfit,
      but there is a secret little thing I learned with diffusion models that might be useful, if you merge the model with a tiny percentage of "random weights" as you keep training, it keeps 'destroy' some of the previously contained information, while training afterwards will kinda re-heal the whole thing.
      It prevents overfitting quite well, bc usually overfitting is when it starts to develop TOOOOO strong patterns, but tiny percentages of random weights disrupts that and also helps get it out of any "local maxima" it might get stuck on.
      local maxima: imagine it as a possible 'hole' where the training is leading the model state into, but its not the most optimal one, it just feels like its optimal for the training algorithm due to the insane multidimensional nature of that many matrices being multiplied together.

    • @alexanderbrown-dg3sy
      @alexanderbrown-dg3sy 22 дня назад +5

      ?? Not at all. Simply have a separate model remove all personal identifier information. Which actually more elegant since you can provide deductive rules for the model to use for filtering.

    • @no_mnom
      @no_mnom 21 день назад +2

      I mean big companies have made rules against using chatgpt and the like because due to how much it was used some prompts would return stuff they were developing in-house sometimes not even publicly known things at the end.
      At the end you need to take care with what data you're handing out and to who 😊

  • @bilalbaig8586
    @bilalbaig8586 22 дня назад +9

    Continous learning is not possible at the moment for most top open weights models because the creators have not released the data used to train the model. A significant amount of training using data that does not include the original data will lead to degradation of the model.

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад +3

      All the more reason to work on this, that is a problem that needs solving. Having all the original training data shouldn't be a requirement for continual learning.

    • @bilalbaig8586
      @bilalbaig8586 20 дней назад +2

      ​@@EdanMeyer This requirement is not something man-made. Its a fundamental property of neural networks. Watch Andrej Karpathy's talk at Sequoia Capital where he discusses these "open-source" models from big tech. You can generate high quality data using your approach but you will need to train a model from scratch using that data. Another approach you could take is categorise your data into "bins" where each datapoint is much more similar to data inside the bin compared to data outside and then train low rank adapters using each bin and then use those low rank adapters to create a pseudo Mixture-of-Experts model. Then as you keep finding new data you can keep adding new low rank adapters to keep increasing the capabilities of your model.

    • @SuperSmashDolls
      @SuperSmashDolls 9 дней назад

      You can self-anchor a fine tuned or continuously learning model using the original, pretrained model's output. For each bit of new training data you learn on, also train on a random completion result from the original model. AFAIK this is what they did with InstructGPT/ChatGPT to get GPT to obey commands.

    • @pollywops9242
      @pollywops9242 8 дней назад

      Well that's relevant I was going to search now

  • @DarkPortall
    @DarkPortall 8 дней назад +1

    if we think of LLMs as brain-esque (which is not necessarily true, but they are somewhat similar), we can think of RAG as just telling you how everything works. showing you the docs, showing you examples, etc. Could you write good code quickly after just seeing examples and docs? maybe, but it gets much easier after practice. practicing stuff literally changes how our neurons connect to make certain connections more likely than before. This is analogical to changing the weights on the LLM. Instead of just trying to remember what they were given in the docs - which is somewhat problematic, their weights are literally changed to make them better at this specific task - like how our brains literally change when we practice things.

  • @justinhunt3141
    @justinhunt3141 16 дней назад

    I actually saw another video that touched on this point, but was more about Moore’s law and that at some point continual learning would be the future because we have the computation on hand at a cheap cost. But, I am glad someone is working on the problem now so that we can transfer over when the time comes. Humans continual learn so it only makes sense for our AI models to do the same. Data is the future and ways to generate useful data will be key.

  • @Sancarn
    @Sancarn 7 дней назад +1

    This is the same problem I have with LLMs currently. They just don't use code I've written even though it's open source lol. It's a big problem
    Another important thing is, sure you may make a coding LLM, but when you get it to code something from the real world, e.g. simulation software, you will likely need an LLM which has knowledge of both physics and coding. General domain knowledge is useful.

  • @johanlarsson9805
    @johanlarsson9805 19 дней назад +1

    Reason 3, which I've worked with since around 2015: My AI needs to be able to learn to get smarter, weights can not be frozen and the net can not be static, nor can it ever become silent.

  • @Julian-tf8nj
    @Julian-tf8nj 2 дня назад

    you voiced some of my misgivings about the RAG in-context learning approach 👍

  • @nicdemai
    @nicdemai 22 дня назад +16

    I really can’t wait for your startup update once “GPT-5” or whatever it will be named is released.

    • @Iam_inevitabIe
      @Iam_inevitabIe 7 дней назад +2

      Why

    • @xeviusUsagi
      @xeviusUsagi 7 дней назад +1

      Why

    • @nicdemai
      @nicdemai 6 дней назад

      Why

    • @jasondads9509
      @jasondads9509 6 дней назад

      They think this is one of the problem a that will be solved by new models​@@Iam_inevitabIe

  • @michaellin6155
    @michaellin6155 6 дней назад

    We do exactly the same thing. What happens is clients think finetuning and in context learning can get them to their target goal. Even worse, some other company has convinced them that finetuning IS the way to go. not knowing these AI wrapper companies just pretty much feed their data into chatgpt to generate synthetic data to fine-tune on. 1. They call our tech pitch BS. 2. After 2-3 weeks, we get a call asking why fine-tuning only results to 60-70% accuracy. and then we tell them "we told you so."

  • @Neomadra
    @Neomadra 23 дня назад +2

    Great video! I totally agree about the potential downsides about RAG. There's another issue with RAG and in context learning, namely that current LLMs often are good at retrieval when given a long context ("needle in a haystack") but not good very good at connecting the dots and reasoning about what's in the context.
    But about your example where context is missing, I think continually learning is also not really helping. If you don't have data for context, then you probably also don't have it for learning in most circumstances. It seems a more general problem for which the solution would be to have a LLM that is better at reasoning and generalizing

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад

      Yes! You got it! I left out half of the argument for brevity, but you also need to be able to get the data to do continual learning. The solution there is to have an agent generate its own data via experience (i.e. RL). The thing is that you can't generate experiences that are continually more relevant to what you want to learn unless you are continually learning. Hence, both of these systems are essential as a pair.

  • @therobotocracy
    @therobotocracy 23 дня назад

    Intuitively I have always thought this. Really interested in what you are doing. Where can we find more info on your work?

  • @iamr0b0tx
    @iamr0b0tx 24 дня назад +1

    I say this all the time. No matter how awesome a deep learning model is if it cant do continual learning its a huge problem. A lot if practitioners work like this problem does not exist

  • @timeflex
    @timeflex 17 дней назад

    VERY interesting! A few questions, if I may:
    1. Do you use LoRA?
    2. Does your LLM operate with a level of certainty of the data it produces? Can it detect a paradox or an absurd in its own answer? Can it do so prior to the final output?
    3. Do you consider self-improving LLMs? Let me explain. Obviously, a static LLM represents a set of frozen-in-time (not-so-simple) links between an input and an output. The quality of those outputs is directly linked to the number of different data points and vectors connecting them (and to the precision of those vectors). So, the question is -- is it possible for an LLM to scan those vectors, extract patterns and then apply them to other areas to get extra data where the density of data is lower? Something like DLSS does with images, you know?

  • @chenqu773
    @chenqu773 20 дней назад

    I've also been thinking about this topic for a while. My reflection took me to the point on how human would normally address this issue. As we know, you can be an expert in some fields, but quite unlikely in many fields. On the other hand, we could leverage our "learning" ability to solve any problem, given the learning materials. Intuitively, this "learning ability" sounds fundamentally different than weights updating of a LLM fine-tuning, where we use this ability to learn knowledge. From this point of view, we might still be far from the "General AI".

  • @vbywrde
    @vbywrde 17 дней назад

    Definitely interesting points. What it makes me think is that we might wind up with small models that cover a specific domain of knowledge, and over time have coordinator models that are able to interlink the smaller models for collaboration between them.

    • @hydrohasspoken6227
      @hydrohasspoken6227 15 дней назад

      That seems the sensible way to go.
      Nobody expects one superapp that does it all, but we expecting a model that does it all

    • @forstuffwow7145
      @forstuffwow7145 12 дней назад

      ​@@hydrohasspoken6227 problem is, the direction seems going to be trying to be one model for all

  • @AmanBansal-xb8uk
    @AmanBansal-xb8uk 22 дня назад +2

    More such videos please! Also, previous title - "Why Longer Context Isn't Enough" was better.

  • @_AmandeepSingh_
    @_AmandeepSingh_ 23 дня назад +3

    Ofcourse we need AI systems with continual learning that has been whole vision of AI for years but we have to figure out a new architecture with existing LLM as we everytime we fine tune the system on new semantics the model weights are shifted towards new distribution and this leads to forgetting of previously learned information which disrupts the whole paradigm.

  • @DistortedV12
    @DistortedV12 24 дня назад

    Is it related to hallucinations or generalizing to edge cases?

  • @comentedonakeyboard
    @comentedonakeyboard 8 дней назад

    2:51 My guess for cintinual learning: adapting to a continuous changing and unpredictable environment.

  • @alexanderbrown-dg3sy
    @alexanderbrown-dg3sy 24 дня назад +2

    Great points. I agree…partially. I def believe in lifelong learning styles of training. I say partially because I see inherit rigid flexibility. First off, what data mixing is being used? You didn’t mention this at all. Whenever we continually train, you notice spikes in loss, this is due to the an anticipatory behavior of these models on past representation. So this means we need to contextually sample small portions of pretraining data and mix with new data, along with some DAP-based method. Careful learning rate tuning. We can greatly mitigate catastrophic forgetting. Ain’t no way this isn’t abdunant in your setup? How do you approach this?
    Also long context ICL has it faults but I feel long-term it will outshine raw tuning. Think batchicl or many-shot ICL with LM generated interleaved rationales. Any limitation you mentioned can be optimized. Pretraining or continual pretraining with a joint Lm(compiled NN, maybe even great latent variables for the LM to represent different states to trigger diff types of symbolic programs in our compiled NN) and system-2 attenion(reformulate to append a linearized KG after context refinement)…
    I still believe in long context ICL..long-term. Great content though. Especially if the LM is equipped with symbolic logic..obviously it would have profound impacts on generalization, assuming your pretraining data is augmented with this style of hybrid data. You literally need a LM to process all training data I believe for this to really work(not changing, adding to the sample context. You must retain the original entropy or…model collapse 😂). At least this the first principle my startup is building from.

    • @DanielSeacrest
      @DanielSeacrest 23 дня назад +2

      I mean I feel like extremely long contexts, and a model that can actually utilise this context to a good degree of accuracy, is essentially continuous learning in a way lol.
      But also you do have some good points. And this reminds me of what Andrej Karpathy said about how pretty much no current models are truly open source. If you wanted a truly open source model you would not only open source the weights but also the training sets for example, and having access to these training sets allows you to do things like continued pretraining (as you also mentioned training with a mix of the old and new does well in mitigating catastrophic forgetting, and im pretty sure that's how OAI has been updating the knowledge cutoff in their models).
      Ive never seen RAG as like a long term solution as it just doesn't allow the model to capture the things it would via continued pretraining or ICL. Having that extra context it can build up an intuition of sorts on the information you have given it which I think will be much more advantageous and its overall just more flexible.
      And for continuous learning maybe you could update only a subset of the model, the relevant weights? This would be a lot cheaper and CF wouldn't be as prevalent, and those spikes in the loss should also not be as dramatic because you are updating the weights that are more relevant to the new data, it might also lead to reduced overfitting because your not allowing the entire model to adjust to the new dataset. But this solution does present its own challenges.

    • @alexanderbrown-dg3sy
      @alexanderbrown-dg3sy 23 дня назад +1

      @@DanielSeacrest great points bro. Facts super long context and proper context utilization(most part, a data fallacy) is essentially active learning, since attention perturbs activated neurons. I seen some cool research where they backprop at test time against a constraint to “look in the future”, all that and things like quiet-star…I see a clear pathway for removing the need of fine tuning for MOST use cases.
      Yea that makes sense, given a training corpus, identify the most relevant subnetworks and freeze the rest. Wonder how we account for polysemantic nature of models though. Literature time lol. Saying this out loud, it seems so obvious. Has to be a paper already ha.

  • @enriquebruzual1702
    @enriquebruzual1702 16 дней назад

    One approach is to implement continual learning gradually; you could use recently finished projects to train the model and eventually evolve to real-time continual learning. Yes, I understand you would like a problem-solving prediction based on inference from other experiences. You are asking the model to predict solutions based on abstract patterns that don't exist. Models already do that in the form of hallucinations.

  • @maksadnahibhoolna-wc2ef
    @maksadnahibhoolna-wc2ef 2 дня назад

    what's the whiteboard tool you were using btw ?

  • @FuZZbaLLbee
    @FuZZbaLLbee 6 дней назад

    Do you use Lora to add knowledge to the model?

  • @JT-Works
    @JT-Works 19 дней назад

    Wouldn't the best approach be both? Continually learning and a buffer of RAG to have the latest information available?

  • @diadetediotedio6918
    @diadetediotedio6918 24 дня назад +3

    How exactly are you dealing with catastrophic forgetting?

  • @hyperfocus3196
    @hyperfocus3196 8 дней назад +1

    It’s official, size doesn’t matter

  • @LegendBegins
    @LegendBegins 13 дней назад

    Have you considered the security implications of attacks like model inversion against continuously trained models? You’ll need some way to cheaply segment knowledge base access between untrusted tenants or users. That could lead to a lot of parallel models.

  • @sophontec2822
    @sophontec2822 15 дней назад

    A good point is that in-context learning should have a pre-text context which is comparable or related with the new knowledge.

  • @matten_zero
    @matten_zero 11 дней назад

    I paused as well
    Ive thought of this issue with my own projects. RAG in production can be expensive. Just like I can ask GPT-4 questions about various codebases and it performa really well. In the long run its more efficient to get away from RAG.

  • @KrishnanshAgarwal
    @KrishnanshAgarwal 19 дней назад

    which software used to make this cideo ?!

  • @Johnb-ix7cp
    @Johnb-ix7cp День назад

    How does your startup avoid catastrophic forgetting when doing continuous learning?

  • @aamir122a
    @aamir122a 23 дня назад +2

    I do not see this as a LLM or an ML problem. Even humans will struggle to learn and apply something new if they do not have a prior knowledge for it. For example an engineer will struggle with accounting or medicine . Coming back to LLM even with a context provided (RAG) if there was no prior knowledge existed in the training LLM will not produce the desired output. As stated before this is not a unique LLM problem , it s a gereral problem common with humans and machines.

    • @albertmashy8590
      @albertmashy8590 23 дня назад +1

      Not really, humans learn and adjust their weights and biases over time. However LLMs will never do that despite how much data you feed it, it will forget everything beyond the context window

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад

      The difference is that I don't forget literally everything that happened more than 6 hours ago. It would really suck if that was the case lol. Humanity would never progress.

  • @halocemagnum8351
    @halocemagnum8351 23 дня назад +4

    Woooo you're back!

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад +1

      Back and back for a while!

  • @jaysmooveV2
    @jaysmooveV2 24 дня назад

    noiceeeeee video!!!!!!!!!
    start up website ?

  • @ITR
    @ITR 16 дней назад

    My guesses:
    - A lot of code is undocumented, or documented too differently to generalize learning from it
    - Code doesn't just differ from language to language or library to library, but on a per project basis.
    - Specs change over time
    - The bigger the context, the more difficult it is to draw out the correct information
    - More context makes it generate slower or have more error.

    • @ITR
      @ITR 16 дней назад

      oo, i was spot on with some of these, but missed the training specialization one. I was kinda thinking of it, but only in the context of specialization on your type of code.

  • @H2COable
    @H2COable 18 дней назад

    That is an interesting idea. But for the point of view of the user how do you manage the continuous learning? I mean where do you get the data from to keep learning if the data doesn’t exist? You mentioned the model learning with the user the question is how?

  • @iamr0b0tx
    @iamr0b0tx 24 дня назад

    Could not find the email you mentioned

  • @earu723
    @earu723 2 дня назад

    So what’s the solution? Feed it niche documentation and then critique every response as you get them? I.e. provide feedback as you go so you train the model as you yourself learn?

  • @mrrohitjadhav470
    @mrrohitjadhav470 17 дней назад

    When chatgpt arrived, it was like a wave, but it turns out that another novelty-driven convergence bias (getting caught up in the enthusiasm of a new idea and devoting all of your energy to making it even better, without evaluating alternative choices or thinking outside the box). As a non-coder who has been following the llm space for the past 6 months, I have realised that it is too long a journey to have a smart brain that will learn and process to execute; it is just a large language model, which implies constricting all data into a model, making it difficult to continuously fine-tune or train. Limitations in Neuro-Symbolic AI include the integration of structured knowledge representations, adaptability, abstract thinking, and reasoning. Emotional Intelligence and Creativity were the main reasons I suspended my interest in llm. I had plenty of creative ideas. One example: I extracted thousands of lyrics to create a model that will creatively construct a song and existing lyrics into a knowledge graph, but it was only a half-finished copy-paste job; the process of delving deeper into each lyrics that I input was much more difficult to implement. Now, I only use chatgpt or local llms for grammar correction and basic information.😅

  • @joe_limon
    @joe_limon 24 дня назад +1

    If you could fine tune the model whenever it isn't active on the context window. It would be great

  • @SteveBMayer
    @SteveBMayer 23 дня назад +1

    It's like the difference between cramming, and in-depth learning.

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад

      Nice, I might use this analogy in pitches

  • @tlotlooepeng8721
    @tlotlooepeng8721 19 дней назад

    Do you have internships in your startup? Looking for gain experience

  • @Tony-cg5it
    @Tony-cg5it 24 дня назад

    Hello! You mention an email like your bio but I'm not seeing it, only twitter. Maybe you can add it so I can reach out. I'd love to learn more about your continual learning project

  • @ConnorMcCormick
    @ConnorMcCormick 21 день назад +1

    I would flip the question to them
    all animals sleep in order to integrate lessons learned into their embodied knowledge so as to avoid holding it in working or short term memory
    why wouldn't we expect llms to benefit from this same pattern?

  • @SigmoidalHive
    @SigmoidalHive 24 дня назад

    I seem to recall continual learning was essential to the Alberta Plan. in evolution, though, it seems more discrete. for example, all embryonic development converges to the homeobox gene clusters, which suggests distillation of more general biology to a more conservative genetic load. in other words, the information is offloaded to the environment determining how the system builds up or expresses itself. relating this to code generation, I think one of the key components is symbolically filtering for sequences of "atomic" programming (at the ahead-of-time level) that maintain the overall flow of fulfilling whatever niche consumers choose. ideally, at some point we elect for succinctness of verifiable programming & the core model is reflecting on the environment & either interpolating the agency it's already provably demonstrated or extrapolating novel agency that is provably the product of so many atomic programs within the environment.

  • @sophontec2822
    @sophontec2822 22 дня назад +1

    life-long learning

  • @akashkarnatak6581
    @akashkarnatak6581 23 дня назад +1

    By continual learning do you mean full fine-tune on new data ?

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад

      Train on new data as it comes in.

  • @edsonjr6972
    @edsonjr6972 19 дней назад

    Whats your startup btw?

  • @mishXY
    @mishXY 14 дней назад +2

    What about now?

  • @donkeroo1
    @donkeroo1 7 дней назад

    If you’re constantly retraining the model, how do you know if the model is working or not given the constant changes? Imagine changing out the engine on your vehicle everyday, then measuring mpg. Which engine performed best if you changed it everyday

  • @Mr.Andrew.
    @Mr.Andrew. 3 дня назад

    I like the part where it said to email you but then email is nowhere in sight. :)

  • @IndianArma
    @IndianArma 20 дней назад

    Hi. I would love to collaborate and am in the process of developing an agentic ai system with a somewhat similar phillosphy as yours for Large language modeling, albeit, with a few caveats.
    I couldn't find your email in the description though.

  • @TeamDman
    @TeamDman 22 дня назад +1

    The problem seems a bit more obvious if you consider the limits.
    If you have no base model, the in-context learning won't work.
    If you have a base model but more knowledge than fits in your context, in-context learning won't work.
    At some point, you are obligated to improve the base model to get results, so it's a bad premise to aim for a solution where you aren't training base models in any level.
    Great video, nice style!

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад +1

      Good logic, but it's really hard to convince people of this when you're pitching a startup 😅 everyone just likes big LLM big context go brrrr
      Happy you liked the style, this is the same style I used to use in my first videos. Might do a bit more of it and refine it.

  • @fiords
    @fiords 12 дней назад

    But what volume of dataset is needed to have substantial impact for LLM? 10k, 100k, 1M, 200M?

  • @whateverimake9350
    @whateverimake9350 7 дней назад

    2:40 i don't know if i understand correctly but my intuition based on using gpt is that he s really bad at synthesizing the new info using the new rag method. I was exciting i could build a gpt therapist when the gpt assistant feature was introduced, only to find that that's impossible just pasting the documents. Being a therapist and psychologist is about grasping the idea of the texts and appropriate synthesis for the client.

  • @darthrainbows
    @darthrainbows 4 дня назад +2

    I have to question whether LLMs - even in their most advanced form - are even plausibly capable of doing what you've declared your goal to be (generating brand new ideas that have never been thought of before). LLMs are prediction engines, and in order to predict, they learn from the past. How can one predict what has never happened, strictly from learning from the past? You might be able to predict that something new will happen, but never what that would be. I su[ppose that could be interesting in it's own right; the combination of factors X, Y, and Z results in a hole in the LLM's prediction.
    _Humans_ are pretty terrible at this task. Rarely does anyone have a truly new idea. Most of what feels like new is just recycled bits and pieces of old, reassembled into a different whole.

    • @maalikserebryakov
      @maalikserebryakov 4 дня назад

      you = npc

    • @darthrainbows
      @darthrainbows 4 дня назад +1

      @@maalikserebryakov what truly insightful, original, inspired thought it must have taken you to construct such a brilliant ad-hominem attack! How clever of you to skirt the difficulties of constructing a counter argument! I'm sure your mommy and daddy are very proud of you. Gold star!

  • @JulianHarris
    @JulianHarris 11 дней назад

    I’d love to learn from specific examples where in context learning fails where continuous training succeeds. I don’t fundamentally understand the difference between fine-tuning against data set A and adding data set A to the prompt for in-context learning (except live performance as set A increases). The video is not clear (to my understanding at least) on whether this is the comparison, or you’re comparing fine-tuned LLM A against in-context learning of some subset of A. Help 🙂

  • @robbievanwijk2512
    @robbievanwijk2512 11 дней назад

    Is this where agents come into play?

  • @DotaBlitzPicker-wn7oq
    @DotaBlitzPicker-wn7oq 19 дней назад

    I've only used RAG systems in practice, is this video implying somehow mutating the weights of the base model as part of the continual usage of the model?

  • @vladyslavkorenyak872
    @vladyslavkorenyak872 23 дня назад

    Adding the relevant info to context is useful if the model already understands the context. If it doesn't, it must learn by changing the weights.
    From a neuroscience perspective, activities that rely on muscle memory cannot be learnt with the context approach, even if you are a genius. But you could learn calculus in one go with no sleep if smart and motivated enough. I imagine in robotics this will be similar, controllers based on transformers will need to be finetuned to the actuators, you can't provide context and just expect a pretrained model to follow the logical steps to adapt it's outputs to the new configuration.
    Thus must incorate dinamical learning, like humans do. It must somehow process the new info it learned during the day/session, build a training set from it and rehearse. I just hope they don't get demotivated in the journey like I do hahahah

    • @EdanMeyer
      @EdanMeyer  20 дней назад

      That is the idea! It's interesting how people coming from other backgrounds, especially e.g. neuroscience find this to be an obvious conclusion, but people working in AI often dismiss the idea

  • @AGI-Bingo
    @AGI-Bingo 24 дня назад

    Interested! Will happy to collaborate

  • @kevthedestroyer1044
    @kevthedestroyer1044 23 дня назад

    what;s your startup?

  • @piterbunt
    @piterbunt 23 дня назад

    Paused to subscribe😊
    As I am on it: the quality of coding solution based on RAG is not good enough even if there is documentation with examples. I know this problem from using ChatGPT based solution to support a novel modelling approach in OR using just-to-market solver.

  • @atursams5501
    @atursams5501 7 дней назад +2

    Listened and have no idea why you need to train the model. Maybe it would be better if you gave a working demo with an interrsting problem.

  • @kingki1953
    @kingki1953 10 дней назад

    Why don't use vector database to store the continuous data as separate memory like human did?

    • @jnevercast
      @jnevercast 8 дней назад

      Humans don't work like this

  • @user_-zo3qi
    @user_-zo3qi 19 дней назад

    Sweet

  • @tonyd6853
    @tonyd6853 5 дней назад

    RAG: will they notice we made them answer their own question?

  • @moofin4170
    @moofin4170 19 дней назад

    Also wasn't there a paper that showed AI tended to place less importance on everything in the middle of the prompt? i.e. it only cared about the start and end.

  • @kwolftw
    @kwolftw 21 день назад

    An additional issue you don’t mention is that a larger context window does not imply a larger attention window.

  • @pollywops9242
    @pollywops9242 8 дней назад

    I'm messing around with fine tuning on my home server and all my ideas start where there is no reference 😂

  • @AGI-Bingo
    @AGI-Bingo 24 дня назад

    Subscribing ❤ well if you do actually train then you don't need to use this space in the context window. Potentially providing more accurate results on bigger scales.

  • @nehemiahjuan950
    @nehemiahjuan950 8 дней назад

    (Hint: It is size)

  • @andydataguy
    @andydataguy 22 дня назад +2

    The comments section here are gold 🙌🏾💜
    My 2c: Both CL and RAG are vital. RAG provides the closest to real-time context and CL ensures the base model can appropriately interpret the context and meet output requirements.
    We're still very early in this latest season of AI solutions. I think arguing which is best isnt the most productive use of cognitive resources. It depends entirely on the application usecase.
    Some applications should absolutely be fine-tuning their own CL systems. But the vast majority can be handled with RAG. This is the allure and popularity of RAG.
    It's the tool thats cheap, accessible, and will get you pretty far most of the time. Unless you're an experimental quantum physicist or something then you'll surely need to finetune your own.
    With better data engineering for RAG systems I'm confident both points you described can be resolved within 6-18 months.
    Plenty of work to do till then 😁

  • @turkyturky6274
    @turkyturky6274 10 дней назад +1

    The problem is the context, it can only understand a page

  • @pauljones9150
    @pauljones9150 23 дня назад +1

    Interesting

  • @GenAIWithNandakishor
    @GenAIWithNandakishor 17 дней назад

    I don't think the params don't change in long context case.. it won't extract features in depth

  • @jonyngvesyland5461
    @jonyngvesyland5461 22 дня назад

    One result of this process is the creation of a second great attractor.
    Meow.

  • @mlphyzix
    @mlphyzix 8 дней назад

    This is interesting, but I wonder if you're overestimating the difference between state of the art LLM's training data and the majority of research problems and incomplete libraries. Most research in scientific domains doesn't require a complete departure from previous work, and most incomplete libraries are not so alien from existing libraries that their intended functionality can't be understood by an LLM. Granted, even GPT4 by itself probably won't be enough to do really novel work, but GPT4 + LangChain or AutoGPT shows a lot of promise resolving some of the defects of LLMs, like their limited ability to reason. Food for thought ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    Anyway great video! Subscribed and looking forward to seeing where this goes.

  • @pisoiorfan
    @pisoiorfan 22 дня назад

    A balance between in-context and continual training seem to be both necessary ingredients but probably insufficient to deliver genuine creativity. That requires problem space search with sample efficiency, the kind living things seems to have. ruclips.net/video/0a3xg4M9Oa8/видео.html

  • @knowk5737
    @knowk5737 11 дней назад

    I work with rags, can confirm they suck

  • @paprikar
    @paprikar 6 дней назад

    The only thing that limits LLMs is thier design in general, you cant solve problem of hallucinations

  • @seansingh4421
    @seansingh4421 5 дней назад

    Anything below a 34B model is kinda stupid. Also I’ve actually had good success with running LLM’s on a mounted tmpfs RAM drive, the speed was pretty higher than that of normal ssd

  • @domanit927
    @domanit927 2 дня назад

    well if you succeed, let me see the research paper once published.Send me a link when its done.