English

Decoding Probing: Revealing Internal Linguistic Structures in Neural Language Models using Minimal Pairs

Computation and Language 2024-03-27 v1 Neurons and Cognition

Abstract

Inspired by cognitive neuroscience studies, we introduce a novel `decoding probing' method that uses minimal pairs benchmark (BLiMP) to probe internal linguistic characteristics in neural language models layer by layer. By treating the language model as the `brain' and its representations as `neural activations', we decode grammaticality labels of minimal pairs from the intermediate layers' representations. This approach reveals: 1) Self-supervised language models capture abstract linguistic structures in intermediate layers that GloVe and RNN language models cannot learn. 2) Information about syntactic grammaticality is robustly captured through the first third layers of GPT-2 and also distributed in later layers. As sentence complexity increases, more layers are required for learning grammatical capabilities. 3) Morphological and semantics/syntax interface-related features are harder to capture than syntax. 4) For Transformer-based models, both embeddings and attentions capture grammatical features but show distinct patterns. Different attention heads exhibit similar tendencies toward various linguistic phenomena, but with varied contributions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2403.17299,
  title  = {Decoding Probing: Revealing Internal Linguistic Structures in Neural Language Models using Minimal Pairs},
  author = {Linyang He and Peili Chen and Ercong Nie and Yuanning Li and Jonathan R. Brennan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.17299},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Accepted by LREC-COLING 2024

R2 v1 2026-06-28T15:33:32.930Z