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Autore principale: Cao, Xuenan
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2024
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.10361
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author Cao, Xuenan
author_facet Cao, Xuenan
contents This paper argues that we should perceive LLMs as machines of extrapolation. Extrapolation is a statistical function for predicting the next value in a series. Extrapolation contributes to both GPT successes and controversies surrounding its hallucination. The term hallucination implies a malfunction, yet this paper contends that it in fact indicates the chatbot efficiency in extrapolation, albeit an excess of it. This article bears a historical dimension: it traces extrapolation to the nascent years of cybernetics. In 1941, when Norbert Wiener transitioned from missile science to communication engineering, the pivotal concept he adopted was none other than extrapolation. Soviet mathematician Andrey Kolmogorov, renowned for his compression logic that inspired OpenAI, had developed in 1939 another extrapolation project that Wiener later found rather like his own. This paper uncovers the connections between hot war science, Cold War cybernetics, and the contemporary debates on LLM performances.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_10361
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle How Large Language Models (LLMs) Extrapolate: From Guided Missiles to Guided Prompts
Cao, Xuenan
Computers and Society
Computation and Language
This paper argues that we should perceive LLMs as machines of extrapolation. Extrapolation is a statistical function for predicting the next value in a series. Extrapolation contributes to both GPT successes and controversies surrounding its hallucination. The term hallucination implies a malfunction, yet this paper contends that it in fact indicates the chatbot efficiency in extrapolation, albeit an excess of it. This article bears a historical dimension: it traces extrapolation to the nascent years of cybernetics. In 1941, when Norbert Wiener transitioned from missile science to communication engineering, the pivotal concept he adopted was none other than extrapolation. Soviet mathematician Andrey Kolmogorov, renowned for his compression logic that inspired OpenAI, had developed in 1939 another extrapolation project that Wiener later found rather like his own. This paper uncovers the connections between hot war science, Cold War cybernetics, and the contemporary debates on LLM performances.
title How Large Language Models (LLMs) Extrapolate: From Guided Missiles to Guided Prompts
topic Computers and Society
Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.10361