LET MODELS SPEAK CIPHERS: MULTIAGENT DEBATE THROUGH EMBEDDINGS

Chau Pham, Boyi Liu, Yingxiang Yang, Zhengyu Chen, Tianyi Liu, Jianbo Yuan, Bryan A. Plummer, Zhaoran Wang, Hongxia Yang

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Discussion and debate among Large Language Models (LLMs) have gained considerable attention due to their potential to enhance the reasoning ability of LLMs. Although natural language is an obvious choice for communication due to LLM's language understanding capability, the token sampling step needed when generating natural language poses a potential risk of information loss, as it uses only one token to represent the model's belief across the entire vocabulary. In this paper, we introduce a communication regime named CIPHER (Communicative Inter-Model Protocol Through Embedding Representation) to address this issue. Specifically, we remove the token sampling step from LLMs and let them communicate their beliefs across the vocabulary through the expectation of the raw transformer output embeddings. Remarkably, by deviating from natural language, CIPHER offers an advantage of encoding a broader spectrum of information without any modification to the model weights, outperforming the state-of-the-art LLM debate methods using natural language by 0.5 − 5.0% across five reasoning tasks and multiple open-source LLMs of varying sizes. This showcases the superiority and robustness of embeddings as an alternative “language” for communication among LLMs. We anticipate that CIPHER will inspire further exploration for the design of interactions within LLM agent systems, offering a new direction that could significantly influence future developments in the field.

Original languageEnglish (US)
StatePublished - 2024
Event12th International Conference on Learning Representations, ICLR 2024 - Hybrid, Vienna, Austria
Duration: May 7 2024May 11 2024

Conference

Conference12th International Conference on Learning Representations, ICLR 2024
Country/TerritoryAustria
CityHybrid, Vienna
Period5/7/245/11/24

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Language and Linguistics
  • Computer Science Applications
  • Education
  • Linguistics and Language

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'LET MODELS SPEAK CIPHERS: MULTIAGENT DEBATE THROUGH EMBEDDINGS'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this