- Choose your model, choose or add your prompt, run the inference.
- Browse contribution graph.
- Select the token to build the graph from.
- Tune the contribution threshold.
- Select representation of any token after any block.
- For the representation, see its projection to the output vocabulary, see which tokens were promoted/suppressed but the previous block.
- The following things are clickable:
- Edges. That shows more info about the contributing attention head.
- Heads when an edge is selected. You can see what this head is promoting/suppressing.
- FFN blocks (little squares on the graph).
- Neurons when an FFN block is selected.
# From the repository root directory
docker build -t llm_transparency_tool .
docker run --rm -p 7860:7860 llm_transparency_tool
# download
git clone git@github.com:facebookresearch/llm-transparency-tool.git
cd llm-transparency-tool
# install the necessary packages
conda env create --name llmtt -f env.yaml
# install the `llm_transparency_tool` package
pip install -e .
# now, we need to build the frontend
# don't worry, even `yarn` comes preinstalled by `env.yaml`
cd llm_transparency_tool/components/frontend
yarn install
yarn build
streamlit run llm_transparency_tool/server/app.py -- config/local.json
Initially, the tool allows you to select from just a handful of models. Here are the options you can try for using your model in the tool, from least to most effort.
Full list of models is here. In this case, the model can be added to the configuration json file.
Add the official name of the model to the config along with the location to read the weights from.
In this case the UI wouldn't know how to create proper hooks for the model. You'd need to implement your version of TransparentLlm class and alter the Streamlit app to use your implementation.
If you use the LLM Transparency Tool for your research, please consider citing:
@article{tufanov2024lm,
title={LM Transparency Tool: Interactive Tool for Analyzing Transformer Language Models},
author={Igor Tufanov and Karen Hambardzumyan and Javier Ferrando and Elena Voita},
year={2024},
journal={Arxiv},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.07004}
}
@article{ferrando2024information,
title={Information Flow Routes: Automatically Interpreting Language Models at Scale},
author={Javier Ferrando and Elena Voita},
year={2024},
journal={Arxiv},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.00824}
}
This code is made available under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license, as found in the LICENSE file. However you may have other legal obligations that govern your use of other content, such as the terms of service for third-party models.