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ICML 2025

Quantifying Memory Utilization with Effective State-Size

Conference Paper Accept (poster) Artificial Intelligence ยท Machine Learning

Abstract

As the space of causal sequence modeling architectures continues to grow, the need to develop a general framework for their analysis becomes increasingly important. With this aim, we draw insights from classical signal processing and control theory, to develop a quantitative measure of memory utilization: the internal mechanisms through which a model stores past information to produce future outputs. This metric, which we call effective state-size (ESS), is tailored to the fundamental class of systems with input-invariant and input-varying linear operators, encompassing a variety of computational units such as variants of attention, convolutions, and recurrences. Unlike prior work on memory utilization, which either relies on raw operator visualizations (e. g. attention maps), or simply the total memory capacity (i. e. cache size) of a model, our metrics provide highly interpretable and actionable measurements. In particular, we show how ESS can be leveraged to improve initialization strategies, inform novel regularizers and advance the performance-efficiency frontier through model distillation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the effect of context delimiters (such as end-of-speech tokens) on ESS highlights cross-architectural differences in how large language models utilize their available memory to recall information. Overall, we find that ESS provides valuable insights into the dynamics that dictate memory utilization, enabling the design of more efficient and effective sequence models.

Authors

Keywords

  • model analysis
  • interpretability
  • linear systems
  • attention
  • state-space models
  • sequence models
  • memory utilization
  • context utilization

Context

Venue
International Conference on Machine Learning
Archive span
1993-2025
Indexed papers
16471
Paper id
647141941564010158