English

Mechanistic?

Artificial Intelligence 2024-10-15 v1 Computation and Language Machine Learning

Abstract

The rise of the term "mechanistic interpretability" has accompanied increasing interest in understanding neural models -- particularly language models. However, this jargon has also led to a fair amount of confusion. So, what does it mean to be "mechanistic"? We describe four uses of the term in interpretability research. The most narrow technical definition requires a claim of causality, while a broader technical definition allows for any exploration of a model's internals. However, the term also has a narrow cultural definition describing a cultural movement. To understand this semantic drift, we present a history of the NLP interpretability community and the formation of the separate, parallel "mechanistic" interpretability community. Finally, we discuss the broad cultural definition -- encompassing the entire field of interpretability -- and why the traditional NLP interpretability community has come to embrace it. We argue that the polysemy of "mechanistic" is the product of a critical divide within the interpretability community.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2410.09087,
  title  = {Mechanistic?},
  author = {Naomi Saphra and Sarah Wiegreffe},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.09087},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Equal contribution. Position paper. Accepted for presentation at the BlackBoxNLP workshop at EMNLP 2024

R2 v1 2026-06-28T19:18:14.852Z